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

When Scrum Events Are Burdening

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp
At the beginning of a Scrum implementation y, you usually find two main types of team behaviors. Those who embrace the scrum events (Planning, daily, etc.) and try to better understand them to represent one type. There are many issues and many required adjustments and the team is working on them with the coach. Other teams view Scrum events as a total waste of time. They do them reluctantly and don’t see any value in it. What do you do? We’ve had several such cases and we wanted to better understand what’s going on there. After a deeper look into the dynamics of these teams, we reached some conclusions that let us sleep better at night.

Reason One – Lack Of Understanding

The first obvious reason for a team not performing the scrum events would be that they didn’t get what we’re looking for. It may be they went through training, saw videos, and had pep talks with their managers but still, they didn’t get it. They think this is just another fad and it will go. We say culture follows practice but if you don’t understand where you’re aiming for you just won’t get there. Here is where one on one coaching and a lot of patience is in place.

Reason Two – The Double Star Syndrome

A good clue to what’s going on is the value of the scrum events. The events are there to help the team self-organize: to make sure everyone sees what’s going on so everyone can make decisions. Following the above clue, we understand that another possible explanation for what’s going on in these teams is that the command and control management style in these teams has reached some local optimum, meaning, quite frankly, that it works well. There is usually a talented team leader there, that works very hard, and a bunch of people doing what she says. The people around the leader usually admire her, which reinforces the same dynamics. “How can we decide anything without her in the loop?” The result is that the leader keeps working harder and harder and the other people of the team become smaller and smaller, but in some way, they are all happy about it. The team leader’s ego is well provided for in this situation, and the other team members are feeling blessed for having the opportunity of working with her. We call this the “Double Star Syndrome”: the team is working in a star formation (the leader in the middle) and the team leader becomes a star! In this situation, it is no surprise the entire team is against Scrum events. Who needs planning if the leader does it alone and very well anyway? Who needs the daily meeting if the leader goes around telling everyone what to do? No doubt the retrospective is redundant too – let the leader think about what should we do to improve But what’s wrong with this picture? Why should we change? Should we change? These are good questions (and we’re being quite objective here). We would like to say that in the long run, this management form is unsustainable – meaning, it will not hold for long. However, that would not be true. Many teams are working this way, spawning more managers using the same style. A team member looking admiringly at her manager would like to be in her place. Many people are looking for this kind of power and it is a great motivation for working hard and being promoted. This leads us to the ultimate reason, the mother of all reasons for the change:

The Ultimate Reason for Hating The Scrum Events – Everything’s Fine!

To make a change you need to have a compelling reason. If everything’s fine, don’t change anything. Yet, being in this situation, asking ourselves these questions, suggests something started a change process. It may be that the real reasons for change are hidden and you need to discover them. As a manager, as a coach, you must find the reason for the change. Many times we just get into the “implement the ceremonies” frenzy and forget why are we doing it for. That’s not good. We need to remind ourselves again and again why are we doing the change. The bottom line is that when people see the scrum roles as burdening, the solution would not be to enforce them. The solution would be to understand why are they seen this way. Does the team understand where we’re going? Is there something basic about how the team operates that is blocking the agile implementation? Is there really a reason to change?
Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

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