Project Management

What are your sprint goals?

From the Easy in theory, difficult in practice Blog
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Categories: Agile, Project Management


Breaking projects into time boxes known as sprints or iterations is often associated with agile delivery approaches but can also be used to deliver on detailed requirements for an overall project’s scope following the (infamous) approach commonly termed “Water-scrum-fall”.

The benefit of this approach is that it helps to focus a delivery team on a small, achievable set of work items, providing stakeholders with frequent opportunities to provide feedback on completed work items while increasing the transparency and objectivity of progress reporting.

Agile delivery approaches encourage prioritization of the work backlog and this can also be a good practice when using sprints with traditional projects. But this prioritization might not be sufficient to generate a desirable level of energy and focus from the team, so why not define specific goals as one of the team’s standing agenda items for a sprint planning ceremony?

Sprint goals can help by:

  • Providing a measure of progress over and above completion of individual work items from the backlog. Meaningful sprint goals are truly milestones worth celebrating!
  • Giving voice to accomplishments that transcend scope delivery. For example, completing all work items for the sprint with zero defects or meeting sprint commitments without requiring any overtime from team members are both achievements worth celebrating.
  • Helping to focus the delivery team and key stakeholders on meeting a shared objective. This can encourage team self-discipline as they can use alignment with the sprint goal as a key determinant for whether a new work item proposed by a stakeholder or team member is worth adding to the sprint backlog.

Sprint goals should not be dictated, rather they should emerge out of the collective gestalt of the team and are a good pulse check for whether the team is aligned to the overall project vision.

When defining goals, the usual SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant and Time-bound) acronym can be used to test and refine them.

At the end of a sprint, the showcase or demo should include a presentation of the goals and whether or not they were accomplished, and the team’s retrospective ceremony should include a review of the goals including the identification of ideas for improving goals for future sprints.

As Albert Einstein said “If you want to live a happy life, tie it to a goal, not to people or things.”

(Note: GOAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAL! This article was originally published in April 2017 on my personal blog, kbondale.wordpress.com)


Posted on: July 17, 2018 06:59 AM | Permalink

Comments (16)

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Cibin Thomas Reston, Va, United States
Thanks for sharing Kiron!!

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Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Good Points and reminders Kiron

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Thanks Cibin & Rami!

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Drew Craig Sr. Agile & Product Coach| Vanguard Philadelphia, Pa, United States
Thanks, Kiron. Great perspective. I have a sprint planning session coming up; in my invite specifically called out the sprint goal as part of the agenda.

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Thanks Andrew! The hard part is getting the team and PO to come up with a meaningful goal - sometimes these are obvious given where you are in the delivery lifecycle or as a result of a particularly painful retrospective outcome but many times the team can struggle with coming up with anything beyond the usual "apple pie and motherhood" of:

- deliver what we said we would
- have fun doing so

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Drew Craig Sr. Agile & Product Coach| Vanguard Philadelphia, Pa, United States
Yep! Heard that one!
Q: what will our Sprint Goal be?
A: to complete the stories

::face palm::

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Eduin Fernando Valdes Alvarado Project Manager| F y F Fabricamos Futuro Villavicencio, Meta, Colombia
Thanks for sharing

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Sante Delle-Vergini, PhD Senior Project Manager| Infosys Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Good post Kiron. Some teams use single statement goals, and others use a akin to a bullet list. What is your experience, and what's a good example goal statement yu have used? I remember one team (not mine) had a goal statement: "Finish all stories in this Sprint!" zzzzz

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Tamer Zeyad Sadiq Assistant Cost Manager| Turner & Townsend Riyadh, Ar Riyad, Saudi Arabia
Good Kiron. Do you mean same as apply Agile approach to get goals??

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Girija Ramakrishnan Chennai, Tamilnadu, India
Good points, Kiron. This helps definitely the Agile, Traditional cum Agile teams in an effective way. Thanks.

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Asmaa Hamada Alexandria, Egypt
I like the last quotation, (As Albert Einstein said “If you want to live a happy life, tie it to a goal, not to people or things.”)

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Thanks Eduin, Girija & Asmaa!

Tamer - yes, agility applies to all of our activities, including definition of sprint goals.

Sante - Here's a couple which I have heard and felt were good...

- We will all participate in at least one non-solo work activity
- We will not have any stories which we felt were complete rejected by our Product Owner
- We will leave here no later than 5:30 PM each day and still achieve our sprint commitments

Kiron

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Sante Delle-Vergini, PhD Senior Project Manager| Infosys Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Thanks Kiron. These are good ones :-)

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Riyadh Salih Saskatchewan, Canada
Kiron, thanks for sharing a good article

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Thanks Riyadh!

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Shane Drumm Digital Product Person| Journey One Perth, Australia
This is something I definitely need to work on - thanks for the SMART tip!

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