Remove Cadence Remove Demo Remove Development Team Review Remove Risk
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Creating a Risk-Adjusted Backlog

Leading Answers

This article explains what a risk-adjusted backlog is, why they are useful, how to create one and how teams work with them. What is a Risk-Adjusted Backlog? A risk-adjusted backlog is a backlog that contains activities relating to managing risk in addition to the usual features associated with delivering value.

Risk 145
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A modern (and easy) guide to the 5 agile ceremonies

Planio

Agile ceremonies are the fuel that keeps your development team moving forward. Agile ceremonies get abandoned when teams stop seeing the value in them. (And Sprint review ceremony. Working this way reduces the risk that you’re building the wrong software. And why do they matter?). Sprint planning ceremony.

Agile 88
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New PM, New Choices

Leading Answers

Yet when projects use new (to us) technology and tackle problems our organizations have not solved before, then risk, uncertainty, and rates of change will be high. The development team wants interesting work using new technology and skills to further their craft. All the divergent stakeholders will have divergent goals.

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Agile Communications Plans

Leading Answers

So, the responsible thing to do is to agree upfront on how everyone will be kept informed of the project’s progress, risks, issues, etc. Demos  – Having the team demonstrate increments of functionality at the end of every iteration shows what the project has achieved to date. Let’s examine a few….

Agile 135
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The Difference Between The Kanban Method and Scrum

Digite

In this article, he outlines the similarities of the two as WIP Limiting, Pull-based systems – with cadences and a focus on learning – while also explaining their differences. Incremental delivery of software also mitigates risk and maximizes the opportunity to learn from a business, process, and technical perspective.

Cadence 94
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How to Run An Effective Sprint Retrospective (Plus 7 Examples and Templates)

Planio

The official Scrum Guide describes a sprint retrospective as: A meeting held at the end of a sprint where the Scrum Team can inspect itself and create a plan for future improvements to systems, processes, and workflows. In other words, a sprint review is about the product while the retrospective is about the process.

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Webinar Recap: Agile Series Part 2 – Agile Features & Capabilities in MS Project / Project PPM

MPUG

You may wish to use this transcript for the purposes of self-paced learning, searching for specific information, and/or performing a quick review of webinar content. And then I’m going to do a live demo. You’re going to see this coming out at a very fast cadence. Tim Runcie: So I might just say, urgent review right?

Agile 40