Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.

Getting Real About Your Values – The Values Retrospective

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

Bringing values down to earth

Values and principles can often seem lofty and intangible so many agile practitioners prefer to focus on tools and practices. That’s understandable but unfortunate. Because values and principles have the potential to provide us with clarity and guidance that transcends what practices and frameworks can achieve.  Ideally – part of your empiric inspection and adaptation process should explore whether you are living according to your values/principles. To achieve that you can try a value-based retrospective.

 

Values-based Retrospective – The TL;DR (Too long; Didn’t Read) version:

Create a matrix of your values as rows, and some classic retro categories such as plus/delta as columns. Then run a “generate insights” activity in which you try to see what you’re doing that upholds a value or flies in the face of it and could be improved. Afterward continue the retrospective as usual by deciding what to focus on, getting to the root cause, coming up with experiments, and committing to some change.

The Value of a Values-based Retrospective

This can help in a couple of ways:

  • Refresh the team’s recollection and understanding of the values/principles and their importance
  • Help you identify espoused values that you need to work on a bit (or a lot…)
  • Celebrate some values that are coherent with your actual behavior.
  • Identify impediments that are in your way to actually behave in a way that’s aligned with your espoused values.

Choosing Values to Focus On

One question you should probably be asking is “What values should I use?”

  • Your organizational/team values (assuming those are ones you feel are real and relevant – not just posters on the wall…)
  • Values of the agile approach you’re using – e.g. Scrum ValuesSAFe Values, values from the Manifesto for Agile Software Development
  • Values from a management approach you like – e.g. Daniel Pink’s Intrinsic Motivation– in this case, your values will be Autonomy, Mastery, and Purpose.
  • Decision filters like the Lean Decision Filter– in this case, your values will be Value, Flow, Eliminate Waste or the Agile Decision Filter – in which the values would be “making progress with imperfect information”, “treating WIP as a liability”, “encouraging a high-trust culture”

Regardless of what set of values you choose – make sure you understand the value of each value. E.g. how does the Scrum value “Courage” benefit you as a team? Why is it required in order to achieve high-performance? This can be a warm-up activity of the retrospective – each person trying to lay out his perspective on this and then sharing notes.

Improve Collaboratively Using Models

You could also use this retrospective style to bring in sets of values as models to look at while trying to improve. What I mean by that is you could run a retrospective using a certain set of values even if they’re not formally your values. For example, Even if you’re not doing Scrum, running a retrospective using the Scrum Values would be educational, would probably inspire some interesting discussions, and drive some useful experiments. In summary – running a values-based retrospective can be a great way to run a different style of a retrospective – one that is one hand focusing on the roots of what we’re trying to do and on the other hand grounded in our actual behaviors and what to do about them.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

IT Operations
Tools
Atlaassian
Managing Projects
Product Ownership
SPC
Pomodoro Technique
Agile for Embedded Systems
BDD
The Agile Coach
Entrepreneurial Operating System®
Nexus Integration Team
Continuous Improvement
Value Streams
lean agile change management
Kaizen
Risk Management on Agile Projects
Limiting Work in Progress
System Team
Perfection Game
Sprint Iteration
Continuous Integration
System Integration Environments
Jira
Agile Risk Management
Lean Startup
Operational Value Stream
Scrum
Professional Scrum Product Owner
Implementing SAFe
Team Flow
Principles of Lean-Agile Leadership
Lean-Agile Budgeting
Elastic Leadership
Scaled Agile Framework
Reading List
Video
Certification
Agile Contracts Best Practices
Lean Budgeting
Implementation of Lean and Agile
Scrum and XP
AI Artificial Intelligence
Kanban Game
Risk Management in Kanban
SA
Advanced Roadmaps
Agile Release Management
Software Development
QA
Rapid RTC
Lean Agile
Scrum.org
Spotify
Agile Program
The Kanban Method
speed at scale
Agile Project
Kaizen Workshop
Agile and DevOps Journey
Artificial Intelligence
Atlassian
Change Management
Nexus and Kanban
GanttBan
Story Slicing
Tips
Engineering Practices
User stories
RSA
Quality Assurance
Kanban Basics
ARTs
LAB
Agile Israel Events
NIT
Portfolio for Jira
Agile Release Planning
Managing Risk on Agile Projects
Agile Testing Practices
Scrum Values
Professional Scrum with Kanban
Kanban 101
DevOps
Scrum Master
Achieve Business Agility
Lean Risk Management
LPM
Lean Agile Organization
Kanban Kickstart Example
Accelerate Value Delivery At Scale
SAFe DevOps
AgileSparks
Lean Agile Leadership
Business Agility
Continuous Planning
Agile
Software Development Estimation
Agility
Lean and Agile Principles and Practices
Lean Agile Basics
Agile India
Games and Exercises
Slides
SAFe
SAFe Release Planning
Lean Software Development
POPM
Lean-Agile Software Development
Agile Games
Scrum Primer
Test Driven Development
PI Planning
Acceptance Test-Driven Development
Releases Using Lean
Systems Thinking
A Kanban System for Software Engineering
PI Objectives
Continuous Deployment
Risk-aware Product Development
Effective Agile Retrospectives
ART Success
Agile Basics
predictability
RTE Role
Agile Israel
Process Improvement
Built-In Quality
ATDD vs. BDD
Iterative Incremental Development
Legacy Code
An Appreciative Retrospective
Manage Budget Creation
Agile Mindset
Agile Assembly Architecture
Presentation
ALM Tools
Agile Games and Exercises
Keith Sawyer
Nexus
Frameworks
Release Train Engineer
Self-organization
chatgpt
Agile Community
Daily Scrum
Scrum Master Role
EOS®
Agile Techniques
Sprint Retrospectives
Development Value Streams
ROI
agileisrael
Agile Product Development
Professional Scrum Master
Agile Product Ownership
Product Management
Coaching Agile Teams
Hybrid Work
Kanban
Lean and Agile Techniques
Agile Marketing
AI
Covid19
Large Scale Scrum
Applying Agile Methodology
Webinar
ATDD
Lean Agile Management
ScrumMaster Tales
Agile Development
Continuous Delivery
Agile Exercises
speed @ scale
Agile Outsourcing
Nexus and SAFe
Jira Cloud
Introduction to ATDD
Scrum Guide
RTE
Agile Delivery
Legacy Enterprise
Amdocs
Agile Project Management
Sprint Planning
Nexus vs SAFe
Planning
Program Increment
Code
Certified SAFe
Enterprise DevOps
Introduction to Test Driven Development
System Archetypes
Scrum With Kanban
Jira admin
What Is Kanban
WIP
LeSS
Jira Plans
TDD
AgileSparks
Logo
Enable registration in settings - general

Contact Us

Request for additional information and prices

AgileSparks Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter, and stay updated on the latest Agile news and events

This website uses Cookies to provide a better experience
Shopping cart