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Everything You Need to Know About Release Managers

Rebel’s Guide to PM

In this article, I’ll explain what a release manager does and what skills you need to make a success of this role. They work with development teams to track progress and identify potential risks, as well as liaise with other departments such as QA, ops teams, service management, and support. The day could be quite varied.

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To Fix Your OKRs – Go Back to First (Familiar) Principles

Scrum.org

Avoid … mapping all planned initiatives to OKRs. . see this article for a deeper dive on what working ON the business might look like, leverage the perspective of Private Equity firms who focus on working on the business to maximize value creation). Figuring out the right Cadence . So with that in mind – .

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The Forgotten Scrum Event

Scrum.org

Chances are that you said something like “Sprint Planning, Daily Scrum, Sprint Review, Sprint Retrospective, and…. And yet, the Sprint serves a pivotal role in Scrum by setting the cadence for feedback, inspection and adaptation in Scrum. The Sprint begins with the Sprint Planning event and ends after the Sprint Retrospective.

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Unlocking the Power and Mastery of Development Approach and Life Cycle

Project Pulse Journal

This domain facilitates strategic alignment, optimized delivery cadence, methodology customization, increased flexibility, and improved risk management. The desire for a project management framework that sustains deliverability, supports the required cadence, and remains faithful to an adaptable methodology is now within reach.

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A Review Of Scrum For Kanban Teams

Digite

This article is the fourth in a series of “Kanban and Scrum – Stronger Together”. In case you haven’t read Yuval’s post, basically, it presents a map of values and practices in Scrum to Kanban language, and encourages Kanban teams to approach Scrum from a practices point of view. You should go read it now.

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Do We Need Risk Management in Agile Projects?

MPUG

In this article, we’re addressing a common question in modern project management: Do we need risk management in agile projects? Agile project management is a stripped-down version of ‘traditional’ project management that takes different approaches to planning and managing change. Let’s expand that simple answer. Of course not.

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The Increment Is Dead

Scrum.org

These are nice levels of transparency that are much better than just reviewing documentation of course, but they leave a lot to be desired. In order to scale, the Product Owner needs to have the courage to let the Development Team run some of those experiments on their own. Can it also be a release cadence?

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