The Scrum Guide – A Leader’s Perspective

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

Scrum – The Leader’s Perspective

Are you leading Scrum Teams? Are you a leader in an organization that’s leveraging Scrum? Hopefully, you’ve read the Scrum Guide to gain an understanding of the framework your teams are using and to understand your role in it.

You probably feel a bit left out though… The Scrum Guide doesn’t explicitly call out the role of the Leader but successful implementation of Scrum definitely requires leadership. 

The Scrum Guide describes the leadership required by the Product Owner, Scrum Master, and Developers.

In this series of blogs, we’ll talk about leadership outside the Scrum Team.

The first blog post will focus on what Scrum means for you as a leader. Other blogs in the series explore:

What Scrum Means for You as a Leader

Scrum is a lightweight framework that helps people, teams, and organizations generate value through adaptive solutions for complex problems.

Leaders can leverage Scrum whenever the organization is facing a problem/opportunity in an environment that contains uncertainty. This could be uncertainty around either what value looks like or how to create it, or both.

The Key Ideas in Scrum

  • Empiricism – Constantly sensing what is going on using tight feedback loops; Responding accordingly rather than sticking to a stale plan. This is the essence of agility – the combination of awareness of the situation with the flexibility to respond. Another way to look at this is that through different types of feedback loops Scrum helps us manage/control risks:
    • Are we taking the wrong steps to solve a problem / build a product? Let’s manage this risk by doing the work in small increments. Let’s stop to reflect and adjust course on a frequent and scheduled basis. 
    • Could we be focusing on the wrong goal? Let’s constantly reflect on the value of increments we’re creating, together with our stakeholders. Try to use what we’ve created. Reflect upon our goals and adapt them when we realize they’re stale / irrelevant. 
    • Are we using the wrong techniques / approaches to how we work? Let’s continuously inspect and adap our processes and policies. Let’s debrief how we run our meetings, and our teamwork in general. 
  • Self-management – As their organizations grow and scale, Leaders often feel growing stress as they become decision-making bottlenecks. Complex problems and environments require constant decision making since our original plans don’t survive contact with reality. Complex problems require the involvement of multiple disciplines. Leaders find themselves coordinating the work of these multiple disciplines, adding even more to the dependency on leadership. This eventually slows down innovation and progress no matter how hard the leader works. In Scrum we rely on multi-disciplinary self-managed teams that are able to make decisions and create value on their own. These teams require minimal external dependencies and management guidance. To be clear, self-management isn’t anarchy. These teams are organized within constraints and are aligned to the mission set by leaders on behalf of the organization. We work towards self-management over time, as we nurture the competence and awareness needed for it. 
  • Continual Improvement – For both the problem we are solving and how we are solving it. Scrum encourages teams to continually strive to improve. The artifacts and events provide the opportunity to improve. 

Creating the environment where Scrum thrives

Many organizations struggle to create an environment of Empiricism, Self-management, and Continual Improvement. This environment is very different from traditional approaches of structuring work, managing teams, and getting stuff done. The Scrum Guide describes the responsibility for this Scrum-friendly environment as “Scrum requires a Scrum Master to foster (such) an environment…”. However, the reality is there are many challenges that require help from other leaders outside of the team. These leaders typically find themselves in the middle. They are trying to set up the conditions for success in an organizational culture and senior leadership that is often at odds. 

Before applying Scrum a leader needs to determine where and how to apply Scrum in the organization. Here are some of the typical questions a Leader would ask:

  • Focus – What work are we doing in the organization where it’s most worthwhile to implement Scrum? 
  • Problem Ownership – For each of these areas, who should own value identification and maximization? (This is called the Product Owner in Scrum)
  • Team Structure – What’s the best way to organize into teams or teams of teams that can focus? How can we create these teams in a way that will enable them to self-manage an effective empirical process? 
  • Human Resources – What in the way we are structured, staffed, and governed do we need to change to enable successful value creation with Scrum? 
  • Stakeholder Management – Who are the right stakeholders to inspect the results of every Sprint? How can we get them to engage with the team and give useful feedback? 
  • Culture – How can we create an environment where feedback is an opportunity to do better rather than a demonstration of a mistake (that often has further consequences)

Evolving your Scrum

Scrum is simple so you can quickly understand it. It is incomplete – it requires you to complement it with context-specific practices and solutions. The basic rules of Scrum can provide some guidance for what to do and how to behave as a Leader. They will not give you hard and fast answers to all of the above questions. Many of the right answers will emerge over time as your teams gain experience using Scrum in your context. You will have a chance to test out some different ways to address the challenges that emerge. 

To reinforce this concept – Scrum encourages teams and organizations to find the minimum viable way of working. Then you try it out and adapt based on experience. The more frequently you can close this “learning loop” regarding how your organization operates, the faster you’ll converge towards an approach that is optimized for your needs and context. As the organization and its context change and evolves, the continuous improvement learning loop will enable further adjustment. Some practices might become stale and irrelevant. Your process can benefit from the periodical “decluttering” the same as your closet and your kitchen drawers. (If a practice/policy doesn’t spark joy… thank it for its benefit so far and stop doing it…) 

The Leader’s responsibilities in a Scrum environment

To summarize these are the key responsibilities of Leaders in a Scrum environment:

  • Create the conditions where Empiricism, Self-management, and Continual Improvement are possible.
  • Provide clarity of mission/purpose and what good results look like.
  • Serving teams as they work towards these goals using Scrum.

A Leader can use the Scrum Values to help create the conditions for successful Scrum. This will be the topic for the next blog post in this series providing a Scrum Guide companion for Leaders.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

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