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Mike Kuphal's Thoughts

Thoughts on Agile, Lean Startup, and other topics from time to time.

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Month: May 2011

Agile Planning: Remaining Work Hours > Completed Work Hours

Teams I Scrum Master do not track completed hours.  Remaining work hours are the ticket.  That is where the real information is held.  This is not an easy transition for the Project Manager in all of us.  Even for the team members, many of whom have been asked to track completed work hours for years … Continue reading "Agile Planning: Remaining Work Hours > Completed Work Hours"

Agile Planning: Have To See What You Plan

For both Sprint planning, and Product planning, teams I have been part of have found that being able to see (visually) the backlog is very important.  If you are using good old fashion index cards/post-its to record your User Stories and tasks, or using a electronic tool to keep track of them (maybe you have … Continue reading "Agile Planning: Have To See What You Plan"

Agile Planning: What? How Do I Know What I Will Be Working On During The Sprint?

I have heard of many groups that will finish Sprint planning by taking all tasks committed to by the team for the sprint, and assigning them out to each team member.  Teams I have been part of have tried this (especially the first few sprints when new to Agile planning) as it felt like the … Continue reading "Agile Planning: What? How Do I Know What I Will Be Working On During The Sprint?"

Agile Planning: Group Estimate via Planning Poker

The best way teams I have been on have found to estimate via a group is Planning Poker. There are many benefits related to planning as a group (see my previous post on this topic for more).  One thing that was difficult to grasp for me at first, is the idea of group estimating.  Have … Continue reading "Agile Planning: Group Estimate via Planning Poker"

Agile Planning: My Top Five Tips on Decomposing User Stories Into Tasks

Decomposing a User Story involves taking the result your user is looking for (stated as a User Story) and breaking it down into a number of tasks that the team can work on individually.  Here are five tips I have found to be very useful: 1) Decompose User Stories into tasks as a team Group … Continue reading "Agile Planning: My Top Five Tips on Decomposing User Stories Into Tasks"

Agile Planning: ‘Ideal Day’ – User Story Estimation

I don’t like Story Point estimating.  There I said it.  I know many have had success with Story Point estimating, and the Scrum guru Mike Cohn advocates it in his books/etc.  I have just found it to be too abstract, and difficult for developers (and myself) to grasp when starting out using Agile techniques. In … Continue reading "Agile Planning: ‘Ideal Day’ – User Story Estimation"

Agile Planning: Plan/Estimate As A Group, Really?

So you decided to go ‘Agile’ with your team?  Maybe you have read a book or two on Scrum, XP, or something similar.  Many of the base ideals of Agile development make intuitive sense, but this idea of “Group Planning/Estimating”…  Really?  Surely that isn’t going to work with ‘my’ team. I know this is where … Continue reading "Agile Planning: Plan/Estimate As A Group, Really?"
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