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

Scrum Values – The Leader’s perspective

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

How Leaders can create the conditions where Scrum can thrive

As mentioned earlier, Scrum is founded on empiricism – transparency, inspection, and adaptation. Empiricism is only possible in certain cultures and contexts. Leaders have the role of creating and nurturing the culture and shaping the context.


Focus

Are your teams able to focus on one important mission/goal? Do they have one clear set of priorities? They know when to say “No it doesn’t make sense to start this now, our plate is full”. If you’re a senior leader this starts at the portfolio level – being able to say “let’s focus on these key initiatives” and mainly “let’s NOT do these other things until we actually have the organizational capacity to deal with them” creates the culture where the focus is possible. Ideally, Leaders make courageous choices and organize their teams around concrete Product Goals reflecting these choices.

Openness

Leaders should have open discussions about whether their organization/ecosystem is conducive to Empiricism and Scrum as well as inspect and adapt the cultural behaviors and standards that can be impediments to an effective Scrum culture. Are you able to tell your senior leader they are wrong? Are your people able to tell you you’re wrong? How open will the conversation be in the Sprint Review when leaders and teams get together to inspect an increment of work? Will teams open up to what’s really going on? Effective transparency and inspection require this openness. 

Commitment

Leaders commit to setting the Scrum Team up for success and supporting it through the removal of things that get in the way of flow and feedback loops. For example, an existing quarterly planning meeting requires a long detailed report which has no value for the Scrum Team. When this waste is raised the leader should work with the organization to remove the need for the Scrum Team to provide it. 

Courage 

Leaders have the courage to do the right thing when it comes to setting Scrum Teams up for success and when working on tough organizational problems. They make choices and communicate them and the rationale behind them. This doesn’t mean always siding with Scrum or the Scrum Team or making the popular decision. It might mean decisions that will create some hardship for them and others in the short term but are the right decisions when taking the long view. 

Respect

Leaders understand and respect the Scrum Team roles. They work with these roles within the Scrum accountabilities. Because the Scrum Team accountabilities do not directly map to the organization’s job titles and structures this may require the leader to help smooth out any disconnects. Leaders approach the different Scrum events with respect to the work being done, the opinions being shared, and the rules of the Scrum process. 

More thoughts about how Leaders can use the Scrum Values

Leaders should be open about the work, the challenges in the work, and the process/structural/transformational challenges. They should have the courage to share with other leaders and teams, in a transparent way, what the challenges are. They should be committed and focused on addressing these challenges. They should proceed with respect to the rules of the Scrum framework and the space the Scrum Team needs to thrive. Serving a Scrum Team requires a delicate balance. In some cases, you need to teach/mentor. In other cases, you need to let things be and actively do nothing. In some other cases, you need to proactively work with the Scrum Team on the issue. 

This provides an environment where leaders are demonstrating transparency and the values of Scrum. By courageously and openly sharing these challenges it provides an opportunity for others to provide insights and solutions.  

In summary, The Scrum Values of Focus, Commitment, Courage, Openness, and Respect all correlate to an environment that enables Trust, Empiricism, and Self-Management that in turn support innovation and value creation. 

Creating a Culture aligned with the Scrum Values

Creating a culture that thrives upon the Scrum Values is a tough mission. A key issue is that inspecting and adapting the culture is hard when the culture isn’t very transparent. Scrum helps by making the culture and context painfully transparent. Leaders should pay close attention to the tensions that Scrum highlights between its empirical self-management approach and the current organizational culture. 

Addressing these tensions becomes a key leadership role. 

One additional way Leaders can communicate the importance of the Scrum Values is to start by applying the Scrum Values of Openness, Courage, Focus, Respect, and Commitment to their work and interactions with others – including but not limited to the Scrum Team. For example, when presented with an opportunity to be focused they should call out that they are following the value of ‘focus’ and then describe its use. By constantly re-enforcing the Scrum Values and providing context they become role models for the Scrum Teams. 

One more suggestion is to run a values-focused Retrospective where you explore current strengths and opportunities in your culture, from a Scrum Values perspective. This works well as a skip-level Retrospective with some representatives, or with certain roles such as Product Owners and Scrum Masters, or as a wider event with entire Teams.

There are some situations where Leadership teams become Scrum Teams – in these situations, this helps the leaders understand and model the Scrum behaviors and activities as well as helping them use Scrum to implement Scrum. Introducing Scrum is a complex problem which is a perfect context to use Scrum. 

Each situation is different which requires Leaders to apply Scrum in a different way, however ultimately leaders are accountable for creating an environment where Scrum thrives and teams leverage empiricism and self-management to solve complex problems and create value.

A Leader can leverage the Scrum Values as they figure out how to structure a Scrum Team and as they engage with the team. Our next post in the Scrum Guide Leader’s Perspective will cover the Leader’s perspective on the Scrum Team roles.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

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