Project Management

What challenges teams most with Scrum?

From the Easy in theory, difficult in practice Blog
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One of the clichés about Scrum is that it is "easy to understand but difficult to master".

The first part of that is obvious with the Scrum Guide is only eleven pages (if you don't count the title page, purpose and table of contents). There are three roles, three outputs and four events (five if you include sprints as an event but I prefer not to as the whole idea of events within events makes me nauseous).

The second part becomes apparent once you try to implement Scrum within an existing system. Only in very rare cases is it possible to introduce Scrum without radically affecting the team's way of working. This, by itself, is not a bad thing as improving delivery outcomes involves a certain amount of change.

However, the immutable design of Scrum is where challenges occur. On the surface, introducing a new set of events or outputs wouldn't appear to be too drastic, but when it comes to replacing existing roles, outputs and events with the Scrum ones, and implementing them as they are intended to be used is where challenges emerge.

Given my personal observations with Scrum adoption issues, I thought it would be useful to poll a larger audience on which aspect of the framework generated the most challenges. A total of 35 members of the LinkedIn PMI Project, Program and Portfolio Management community answered the poll with the following breakdown of votes:

  • The events: 31%
  • The roles: 31%
  • The outputs/artifacts: 17%
  • The 1-4 week time box: 20%

This is consistent with what I have observed.

While there might be some quality issues with sprint and product backlogs, and immature teams might not always produce an increment, it usually does not take too long for most teams to get comfortable working with these artifacts. Similarly, while there might be a need to increase sprint duration when dealing with the "real world" constraints of non-software projects, over time, teams do get better at slicing work items such that "something" of value can be produced within a short amount of time.

The biggest challenges I've seen are with the proper adoption of the Scrum events and roles.

Whether it is Daily Scrums which turn into status meetings, psychologically un-safe Sprint Retrospectives, Sprint Reviews where no external stakeholder attends or Sprint Planning which takes days to complete, the purpose behind and prerequisites for successful events get lost in implementation.

While we all want C.R.A.C.K. Product Owners, and cross-functional "whole" teams, we end up with PO's who have no decision making authority or no time, and unpredictable team member allocation from one sprint to the next.

So when we consider the large number of conditions which are required to enable Scrum to be implemented as designed, the probability that they will all be met within a typical organization is quite low.

And this is why "Scrum-but" is the default, not the exception.


Posted on: March 20, 2022 07:00 AM | Permalink

Comments (12)

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Luis Branco CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
The topic that you brought to our reflection and debate was very interesting.

Thank you for sharing and for your survey results.

I didn't understand "While we all want C.R.A.C.K."

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Denathayalan Ramasamy Chief Technology Officer| Atal Incubation Centre -CIIC Chennai, Tamilnadu, India
Well said; I have written a article with similar thought process...

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:ugcPost:6801761833238835200?updateEntityUrn=urn:li:fs_updateV2:(urn:li:ugcPost:6801761833238835200,FEED_DETAIL,EMPTY,DEFAULT,false)

We need to practice it rigorously to master it.

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Thanks Luis -

CRACK is an acronym which Boehm and Turner coined in 2003 to reference five characteristics of effective product owners:
Collaborative, Representative, Authorized, Committed & Knowledgeable.

Kiron

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

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Luis Branco CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
Thanks for clarifying the meaning of C.R.A.C.K.
It's a new acronym for me.
Nothing like asking when you don't know.

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Absolutely, Luis! A day without learning something new is a lost opportunity!

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Waqas Mahmood Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
Very nice blog, highlighted interesting points

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

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alan rossney Project Manager| jacobs Engineering Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
Thanks Kiron. Good to see some feedback on the Challenges with Scrum.

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

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Shanos Kunhahamu Product Manager, Mobile Wallet| First Abu Dhabi Bank Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Thank you Kiron for sharing your experience.

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Binay Samanta Director| Project & Environment Consultants Dhanbad, Jharkhand, India
Only in very rare cases is it possible to introduce Scrum without radically affecting the team's way of working.

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