Sometimes a Kind Word is Enough…

I will be honest with you all. Being an Agile Coach, as rewarding as it is, has its moments where you just want to bang your head against the wall. Like with any job, you will eventually have days in which everything goes wrong.

Last Monday I had one of those days. Where I had planned a good session with one of my scrum teams, it got shot down due to the fact the team had spend the morning in discussion with various people instead of refining the user stories for our first sprint.

Of course, as a coach you try to facilitate the process and make the best of it. Being Agile means being able to adapt when plans get shot down and so I did. The result was a 3 hour session in which we did refinement and planning, with me walking a fine line trying to keep the team on track, while still giving them space to make their own decisions so that they can come with a work load that they can commit to. In the end we managed to get just that.

Of course you can be happy with a result, but at that moment I was drained and a bit frustrated. The hard part as a coach is not to project your frustration onto your team because it would only influence the team in a negative way. You need to let it go, but Agile Coaches are human beings, too.

That is why it was all the more pleasant to get a compliment of one of the senior members of the team for my part in facilitating the process and keeping everyone on target. It really made my day to have someone recognise the effort you put in on behalf of the team and confirm that even though it was taxing it paid off.

I get my energy from watching my teams grow and become better and definitely don’t seek recognition for its role, but an earnest compliment goes a long way in recharging your battery.

Self-Organisation and Happiness

One of the twelve Agile principles is working with self-organising, cross-functional development teams. Self-organisation is possibly one of the most difficult Agile principles to implement. It sounds easy enough, but is often misunderstood and underestimated how difficult it can be to create self-organising teams.

Luckily there are methods to stimulate self-organisation, one of which I will elaborate on in this article.

Continue reading Self-Organisation and Happiness

Defect Management in Scrum

One of the key aspects of Scrum that makes teams perform better is organising the flow of work. The backlog of a team is its only source, and because it’s prioritised the team is guaranteed to always deliver valuable features. So much for theory. In reality a team has to deal with a lot of distractions that make it hard to focus on delivering the sprint goal: issues, outage, bugs, changing requirements; stuff that “absolutely cannot wait”.

Indeed, defects need to be dealt with. As a Scrum Team you face the daunting task of making sense of it all to come to a decision how to deal with a request. Luckily there are some guidelines to help you make a decision how to deal with these things.

Continue reading Defect Management in Scrum

I am becoming a Professional Agile Coach

Keeping up with writing on my blog seems to be something I am not good at, but I believe this is about to change. It has to do with the fact I am training to become a professional Agile coach, a process I am very much enjoying right now but also something that makes my head spin with possibilities and ideas. In short, enough fuel to feed the fire.

I feel like I should take you back a few months to explain what has happened.

Continue reading I am becoming a Professional Agile Coach