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

Scrum Board Setup Tips and Tricks

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

I’d like to share with you some tips and tricks for setting up a scrum board I usually share with my clients. The bottom line is that too many tools have too many features that support old ways of thinking. Let’s look at the various items one by one.

Subtasks

Like the human tailbone, subtasks were once useful but are now mainly a source of pain. When we worked in Waterfall we measured progress with completed subtasks, but in agile when stories are short, subtasks are a burden.

A burden for developers who need to mess with subtasks using the ALM tool.

This a burden for managers who measure progress using a burndown chart that usually relies on subtasks estimation. That’s a burden because burndown charts may time tell an incorrect story (all work done but nothing is working) – progress should be measured by “done” stories, usually a burnup chart.

Using subtasks should be a choice given to developers. If you find it useful then use it. I prefer just discussing the work to be done with the other people working with me on a story. If needed we can write it down on a whiteboard, but usually, there is no need to write it down as the story is so short. We just do the job.

Showing subtasks on a scrum board takes the focus from stories getting done to subtasks. It makes the scrum board too clattered and worse of all it lets people focus on their specific job and not on the story getting done. Bad subtasks! Bad!

Swimlanes 

Another evil thing is swimlanes. Second only to subtasks.

People usually need swimlanes because there is too much information on the board. That’s indeed a problem. Many times it will be … subtasks! If it isn’t subtasks it may be either the stories are too small or the team is too big. Or maybe something else.

The idea is we need to see why are there too many items on the board and handle that problem.

The big problem with swimlanes is that it distracts you. When you have swimlanes it is difficult to see what is now in progress. This is because usually there will be items in the “to do” column which will make the swimlane too wide to see all the items in one column.

Your focus is on the things that are now in progress and that’s what you need to see.

Many times there is a swim lane per team member. This will hint that we are trying to make sure people are utilized. Like the manifesto would say, it is important to make sure people are utilized but it is more important to get stories done.

Sometimes team members ask for a swimlane per developer. This tells us that people really care only about what they need to do and not about the team. This brings us to the next item:

Story Assignee

Almost all tools allow one person to be assigned to a story. (Leankit allows many). If you want to assign more people you can use subtasks. However, we already discussed subtasks and the conclusion was quite clear.

We will usually need to assign more than one person. In many places, at least one developer and one QA will be assigned. More than that, we will be happy if people can swarm on stories – having several people working on one story is fun and contributes to teamwork and thus very effective.

So, what do we do?

Many tools allow the addition of custom fields. For instance, Jira. I usually recommend clients working with Jira add a custom field called “assigned team members”. The field type should be multi-select. You will need to manually add the list of all team members. Once you do that you ask the tool to present the information on the card on the board and suddenly – voila! You have a strong scrum board where you see the people involved in every story. That’s great.

Last but not least – Columns

Most tools start with the standard “To Do – Doing – Done” columns + a backlog. (read here about the critical difference between backlog and to-do). That’s great! Why touch it? Please don’t.

Many teams will add a “Test” column. And a “pull request” column. And there are more.

The problem with these additional columns is that they are good excuses for things getting stuck. If there is a “dev” column and a “Test” column it means it is really all right to finish dev (I’m done!) and QA can be done later. Reminds you of subtasks? correct, it is similar.

If the sprint is only two weeks long and stories are short, there should be no reason for these additional columns. Just get done with the story – and please no stories! Remember we already have the names of all involved people on the card – just get it done with.

Conclusion

A scrum board should be very simple. There is a list of stories to do. Some are in progress, some are already done. We know who is working on what. That’s it. Don’t let fancy features distract you.

You may be interested in one of our Agile Up! workshops where we help you use popular Agile ALM tools such as Jira and TFS more effectively.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

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