About this session — Basics of Scrum, Part II
The second session on Scrum will go into more detail about what is happening during each of the Scrum ceremonies. Topics will include Sprint Planning, During the Sprint, Sprint Review, Sprint Retrospective, and Benefits of Scrum. We’ve tried to keep the prepared material a bit shorter to leave time for more questions and discussion.
More talks in this series:
- Foundations of Agile, Part I — Monday, November 4, 1:30 - 2:30 pm, ET
- Foundations of Agile, Part II — Tuesday, November 5, 3:30 - 4:30 pm, ET
- Basics of Scrum, Part I — Friday, November 8, 1:30 - 2:30 pm, ET
- Basics of Scrum, Part II — Tuesday, November 12, 3:00 - 4:00 pm, ET
- Intro to Kanban, Part I — Wednesday, November 13, 3:00 - 4:00 pm, ET
- Intro to Kanban, Part II — Thursday, November 14, 2:30 - 3:30 pm, ET
About the speakers
Alan Atlas is currently the Agile Coach for login.gov, and has been with 18F for nearly four years. During that time, he has primarily delivered various kinds of Agile training, coaching, and management consulting. He began his Agile career as Scrum Master for the team at Amazon.com that build Amazon S3. Before coming to 18F, he spent over ten years consulting and coaching privately for Agile teams at various private sector companies.
Alan Brouilette is the Chief of Staff for 18F. He came here in 2015 to be an Agile coach and found himself learning Operations by doing, developing processes for staffing, agreements, travel, and other bits and pieces that make 18F function (e.g. meeting facilitation, and putting out fires). Prior to 18F he worked in the financial industry, news and sports radio, and taught processes and collaboration.
What is Agile?
If you take nothing else from all these words, take this — Agile is not a checklist, or a methodology, or a series of rituals. Agile is a way of thinking and a way of attacking problems. Embrace mistakes, learn, and keep trying. Mess up, and learn again and again and again. Cut your losses. Fail forward fast. It’s okay. You won’t get fired. You’re always improving.
As we put it in the 18F Guide to Agile —
There are three basic approaches to software development: Waterfall, Agile, and Chaos.
Chaos is when you don’t really have a methodology, and you don’t really learn anything, but everybody’s super busy all the time. Chaos is often characterized (or justified, if you want to be more critical) as “firefighting,” and it is suggested that there is no time to plan or learn because there is just so much to do.
Waterfall is when you lay out The Plan in full before you start: every detail, every feature, every meeting, every benchmark, and then you’re wrong on most of them but forge ahead anyway, secure in the knowledge that following The Plan gives air cover in the likely event that the thing you’re building doesn’t work the way you expected it to when you made The Plan.
Agile is different. In Agile, you build big things a baby step at a time. You are motivated and engaged because you are empowered to make your own decisions about how you accomplish your work. Agile has an end result in mind, and maybe a timeframe, but it only gets into the details as needed, which allows for change in response to new information.
Related Links:
- The 18F Guide to Agile
- Agile Fundamentals
- Glossary: Agile Terms, Phrases and Concepts
- The Agile Manifesto
- How to check if your team is using Agile
Want to talk to others in government who are using Agile?
- Join the Agile/Lean Community of Practice »
- Join the DevOps Community of Practice »
Learn more about how 18F can support your team at https://18f.gsa.gov
Questions about this event or future events? Send them to digitalgov@gsa.gov.
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