As Scrum Masters we are intimately familiar with Retrospectives. We plan, organize and facilitate retrospectives for our team members and even larger chunks of the organization. But when was the last time you did your own personal retrospective? Leading by example is a concrete path for success so do the same things you ask the team to do. In this episode we discuss concrete examples of “leading by example” with Joe Anderson.
About Joe Anderson
Joe is a Scrum Master at a small travel technology company with a passion for bringing out the best in people and building deep relationships. He works hard to foster an environment of safety, fun and learning with a focus on relentless improvement.
You can link with Joe Anderson on LinkedIn and connect with Joe Anderson on Twitter.
Many organizations adopting Agile as of today are in a transition. From the Project Management paradigm to the Agile paradigm. How can we engage with Project Management to help the organization evolve? This is the topic of today’s conversation with Joe Anderson: how do you engage with Project Management to help the organization move towards Agile?
About Joe Anderson
Joe is a Scrum Master at a small travel technology company with a passion for bringing out the best in people and building deep relationships. He works hard to foster an environment of safety, fun and learning with a focus on relentless improvement.
You can link with Joe Anderson on LinkedIn and connect with Joe Anderson on Twitter.
The teams we work with are victims of their own limiting beliefs. They bump against the prejudices, and the lack of belief they have and need to break through before they can improve how they work. What do those “limiting beliefs” look like? Which limiting beliefs have you identified in your teams? Listen in and join the conversation on twitter! Mention @scrumpodcast and let’s keep identifying those limiting beliefs!
In this episode we refer to Coaching Agile Teams by Lyssa Adkins as one of the books Scrum Masters should have in their book-shelf!
About Joe Anderson
Joe is a Scrum Master at a small travel technology company with a passion for bringing out the best in people and building deep relationships. He works hard to foster an environment of safety, fun and learning with a focus on relentless improvement.
You can link with Joe Anderson on LinkedIn and connect with Joe Anderson on Twitter.
In a big agile transformation there are many stakeholders, many expectations that affect our work as Scrum Masters or Agile Coaches. In those environments Courage becomes a critical value for us. Joe explains his story of failure, and the role that Courage can take in helping you avoid the anti-pattern that Joe describes in this episode.
About Joe Anderson
Joe is a Scrum Master at a small travel technology company with a passion for bringing out the best in people and building deep relationships. He works hard to foster an environment of safety, fun and learning with a focus on relentless improvement.
You can link with Joe Anderson on LinkedIn and connect with Joe Anderson on Twitter.
When joining a new team or organization we need to be aware of what is going on before we can start our efforts to help the organization. How can we do that? Arif shares with us 3 tools he uses regularly that help him understand the system and define his next actions as a Scrum Master.
About Arif Bobat
Arif is an experienced Scrum Master with a passion for enabling teams achieve their potential, Arif loves challenging situations. In the last 5 years he has been made redundant twice and fired twice. He is not afraid of speaking up when he sees anti-patterns and/or a lack of willingness to change behaviours.
You can link with Arif Bobat on LinkedIn and connect with Arif Bobat on Twitter.
We want to help teams and organizations succeed. This is the focus of our work as Scrum Masters. But here’s the thing, sometimes the team needs to risk failure to go beyond the established patterns of behaviour. In this episode, Arif explains the role of discomfort in the growth of the team and the Scrum Master, as well how to avoid going beyond breaking point.
In this episode we discuss the technique of “Role Playing” as a method to help the team understand their own behaviours.
About Arif Bobat
Arif is an experienced Scrum Master with a passion for enabling teams achieve their potential, Arif loves challenging situations. In the last 5 years he has been made redundant twice and fired twice. He is not afraid of speaking up when he sees anti-patterns and/or a lack of willingness to change behaviours.
You can link with Arif Bobat on LinkedIn and connect with Arif Bobat on Twitter.
There are plenty of opportunities to help teams and organizations change and improve. In this episode we talk about how trying to help teams reduce project risk can help drive change. Arif explains the steps he took to help the team change the way of working by focusing on simply reducing the risk of the project. A simple project management approach that can drive change to our ways of working.
In this episode we discuss the concept of a Walking Skeleton that can help focus the team and reduce project risk.
In this story that Arif shares with us, he explains how you can focus the team because if you don’t the teams might succumb to indigestion: wanting to do too much. But how can you help the teams escape that anti-pattern? Listen in as Arif describes the steps he took to help the team getting out of that indigestion anti-pattern. As we discuss the anti-pattern we refer to the 3C’s for User Stories, a way to look at User Stories that drives collaboration.
In this week’s book of the week we get a BONUS! Arif recommends Drive! By Dan Pink and Story Mapping by Jeff Patton. Check out why!
About Arif Bobat
Arif is an experienced Scrum Master with a passion for enabling teams achieve their potential, Arif loves challenging situations. In the last 5 years he has been made redundant twice and fired twice. He is not afraid of speaking up when he sees anti-patterns and/or a lack of willingness to change behaviours.
You can link with Arif Bobat on LinkedIn and connect with Arif Bobat on Twitter.
Working with a team that had very little going for them, Arif tried his best. He tried to raise awareness of the problem, he tried to help the team improve, he raised obstacles to management. Was that enough? Listen in as Arif describes his journey in an impossible situation, and explains why - sometimes - you need to get fired as a Scrum Master otherwise you are not doing your job!
In this episode we discuss the GROW model of coaching.
About Arif Bobat
Arif is an experienced Scrum Master with a passion for enabling teams achieve their potential, Arif loves challenging situations. In the last 5 years he has been made redundant twice and fired twice. He is not afraid of speaking up when he sees anti-patterns and/or a lack of willingness to change behaviours.
You can link with Arif Bobat on LinkedIn and connect with Arif Bobat on Twitter.
System conditions - which affect our teams, but are outside their control - are not always simple to tackle, but with this question they will at least be simple to detect. In this episode, Donald shares with us a very powerful question when it comes to understand what is affecting the teams we work with, but is outside their power of influence.
We also discuss some of the anti-patterns that teams get stuck in, when they don’t tackle the system conditions that affect them.
About Donald Ewart
For more than 10 years, Don has been a scrum master and coach working in different sectors in London and across the UK as an independent consultant.
With a background of 10+ years in several development roles for web and finance systems, Donald has a good technical knowledge of modern development techniques, and can quickly build rapport and respect with development teams, understanding their issues and helping them to find the right solutions.
You can link with Donald Ewart on LinkedIn and connect with Donald Ewart on Twitter. You can also find out more about Donald’s work in his website.
Donald traces a path for the teams he works with. This path helps him assess his own success and helps him focus on the next steps that the teams need to go through.
In this episode we discuss leadership, and recommend the book Turn the Ship Around! By David Marquet (David Marquet has been a guest on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast before). We also talk about Powerful Questions, as a tool that helps us, Scrum Masters, spark the right kind of conversions with our colleagues.
About Donald Ewart
For more than 10 years, Don has been a scrum master and coach working in different sectors in London and across the UK as an independent consultant.
With a background of 10+ years in several development roles for web and finance systems, Donald has a good technical knowledge of modern development techniques, and can quickly build rapport and respect with development teams, understanding their issues and helping them to find the right solutions.
You can link with Donald Ewart on LinkedIn and connect with Donald Ewart on Twitter. You can also find out more about Donald’s work in his website.
Donald joined one team and found that they only had a very superficial knowledge of Scrum. They knew the ceremonies, the meetings, the formalities, but something was off. In this episode we discuss how you can “test” if your team really understands Scrum, and how to help the team realize where they are in their journey to adopt Scrum.
About Donald Ewart
For more than 10 years, Don has been a scrum master and coach working in different sectors in London and across the UK as an independent consultant.
With a background of 10+ years in several development roles for web and finance systems, Donald has a good technical knowledge of modern development techniques, and can quickly build rapport and respect with development teams, understanding their issues and helping them to find the right solutions.
You can link with Donald Ewart on LinkedIn and connect with Donald Ewart on Twitter. You can also find out more about Donald’s work in his website.
In this episode we introduce a new Feature: the Featured book! A recommendation by our guests that will help you choose which books to read. Every week a new book for you to read.
This week Donald recommends you revisit one of the classics: Agile Software Development with Scrum by Schwaber and Beedle. Listen in to learn why!
About Donald Ewart
For more than 10 years, Don has been a scrum master and coach working in different sectors in London and across the UK as an independent consultant.
With a background of 10+ years in several development roles for web and finance systems, Donald has a good technical knowledge of modern development techniques, and can quickly build rapport and respect with development teams, understanding their issues and helping them to find the right solutions.
You can link with Donald Ewart on LinkedIn and connect with Donald Ewart on Twitter. You can also find out more about Donald’s work in his website.
In this episode we discuss how teams, in the forming phase, may get stuck in the avoidance of conflict, and how conflict may actually be a sign that the team is progressing in their journey to be an effective team. It all starts with a human connection! We describe tools and signs that help us detect if our teams are stuck.
About Donald Ewart
For more than 10 years, Don has been a scrum master and coach working in different sectors in London and across the UK as an independent consultant.
With a background of 10+ years in several development roles for web and finance systems, Donald has a good technical knowledge of modern development techniques, and can quickly build rapport and respect with development teams, understanding their issues and helping them to find the right solutions.
You can link with Donald Ewart on LinkedIn and connect with Donald Ewart on Twitter. You can also find out more about Donald’s work in his website.
We sometimes face situations where the teams are not ready to be Agile. In this episode we discuss such a story and talk about what we need to have in place to even get started with Agile. This is a great reminder that we should not try to make all teams Agile or all projects Agile. First we need to discuss and agree on the conditions we need to get started on our Agile journey.
In this episode we talk about the book Agile Project Management with Scrum by Ken Schwaber.
About Donald Ewart
For more than 10 years, Don has been a scrum master and coach working in different sectors in London and across the UK as an independent consultant.
With a background of 10+ years in several development roles for web and finance systems, Donald has a good technical knowledge of modern development techniques, and can quickly build rapport and respect with development teams, understanding their issues and helping them to find the right solutions.
You can link with Donald Ewart on LinkedIn and connect with Donald Ewart on Twitter. You can also find out more about Donald’s work in his website.
When looking at the team and the system conditions that affect its performance we need tools that help us understand the team beyond its physical boundaries (people, room, tools). In this episode we discuss the Integral Agile Model, introduced by Lyssa Adkins and the Agile Coaching Institute. This tool can be used as a system thinking tool to look at the team and understand that overall system that affects the teams we work with.
In this episode we refer to the book Coaching Agile Teams by Lyssa Adkins.
About Venetia Foo
Venetia has been on her agile journey since 2007 and has been a witness to the best and to the worst of it. She is passionate about learning and continuous improvement. She uses a variety of skills to empower and enable teams to perform at their best.
You can link with Venetia Foo on LinkedIn and connect with Venetia Foo on Twitter.
Scrum Masters are seen as problem solvers. But is it really what they are there to do? Venetia challenges us to think about how we can help the teams take over the problem solving process themselves. How can we do it? How can we motivate teams to “own” the solving of their problems?
These are some of the questions we tackle on this episode where we share many tools for you to help your team own their problem solving process!
About Venetia Foo
Venetia has been on her agile journey since 2007 and has been a witness to the best and to the worst of it. She is passionate about learning and continuous improvement. She uses a variety of skills to empower and enable teams to perform at their best.
You can link with Venetia Foo on LinkedIn and connect with Venetia Foo on Twitter.
Venetia, a Scrum Master got the order from project management: the project must be moved to a new team, hundreds of miles away in another city! Wow, what a challenge!
When we discuss changes on the podcast we very often talk about Agile adoption, Agile transformation or some other “larger” kind of change. Venetia was facing a different story. She was facing a change of team for an existing product! In this episode Venetia shares how they were able to successfully onboard new team members (in a new city!) and change the whole project to that new team over a period of a few months. A real, tangible change that everyone needed to get used to, and execute it at the same time!
About Venetia Foo
Venetia has been on her agile journey since 2007 and has been a witness to the best and to the worst of it. She is passionate about learning and continuous improvement. She uses a variety of skills to empower and enable teams to perform at their best.
You can link with Venetia Foo on LinkedIn and connect with Venetia Foo on Twitter.
Many of us have been in teams where there’s a “dominant” team member. But have we thought about the possible consequences that it may bring to the team? In this episode we explore the possible consequences that dominant team members can trigger. We also discuss a very unusual way to address such situations, one that takes into account the whole team, not just the dominant team member.
About Venetia Foo
Venetia has been on her agile journey since 2007 and has been a witness to the best and to the worst of it. She is passionate about learning and continuous improvement. She uses a variety of skills to empower and enable teams to perform at their best.
You can link with Venetia Foo on LinkedIn and connect with Venetia Foo on Twitter.
A project is late and we think: let’s add more people. Project Managers all over the world use this technique to try to get their projects on schedule. However it’s not that easy…
In fact, integrating new project team members in an existing team actually changes the dynamic for the whole team! In this episode Venetia Foo walks us through a failure moment, where as Scrum Masters we are part of the integration process for a new team member, but that’s not an easy process at all! Listen to what Venetia learned from that story and what she does now when a new team member joins the team.
About Venetia Foo
Venetia has been on her agile journey since 2007 and has been a witness to the best and to the worst of it. She is passionate about learning and continuous improvement. She uses a variety of skills to empower and enable teams to perform at their best.
You can link with Venetia Foo on LinkedIn and connect with Venetia Foo on Twitter.
Jac shares with us a workshop he uses to help the teams he works with identify the system around them. This is the system that may be helping them (keep), or preventing them (change) to reach their goals. During this episode we talk about some specific tools that help us facilitate this workshop, like for example, the Moving Motivators from Management 3.0.
About Jac Hughes
Jac is a scrum master who has a passion to help teams become empowered, autonomous bust mostly importantly productive. Jac has served 7 years in the Royal Navy before moving into the world of IT.
You can link with Jac Hughes on LinkedIn.
Jac starts by sharing his value that orients the definition of success: People over Metrics. That is, while metrics are important, we must always consider the people first, not the metrics. Jac describes some of the symptoms of a successful outcome from our Scrum Master work, and shares with us some of the tools he uses to help him get to that successful outcome.
About Jac Hughes
Jac is a scrum master who has a passion to help teams become empowered, autonomous bust mostly importantly productive. Jac has served 7 years in the Royal Navy before moving into the world of IT.
You can link with Jac Hughes on LinkedIn.
Change is a dreaded word in many work places. They may be associated with fads, change of management, new processes that make our jobs harder, etc. But sometimes - when adopting Agile for example - change is something that helps us all and our customers! How can we help teams, especially teams with a long experience in pre-agile methods, to change and adopt Agile? Jac shares with us the Lego Scrum game and how that helped him bring a new hope to an old organization.
About Jac Hughes
Jac is a scrum master who has a passion to help teams become empowered, autonomous bust mostly importantly productive. Jac has served 7 years in the Royal Navy before moving into the world of IT.
You can link with Jac Hughes on LinkedIn.