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Introduction to Agile Release Planning and Execution Using Scrum
Length:
2 Days
Description:
This course dives much deeper than the one day introduction to Scrum that teaches the participants the principles and methodology of Scrum from the customers’, teams’ and process owners’ points of view. Participants will learn how Product Owners should create Product Backlogs as well as how teams break down Backlog items into prioritized tasks and execute Sprints. In addition, participants will learn the right methods, logistics and metrics needed to execute and track the release and Sprints and bring it to a successful customer review. Finally, participants will learn how to use these skills within a large-scale, distributed environment.
The course includes instructor experiences, case studies, and several in-class labs will enable participants to build knowledge and skills through active participation instead of lectures.
Topics:
Overview of Scrum for product development
Fundamental tenants of Scrum
Transparency
Inspection
Adaptation
Roles and Responsibilities
Product owner
ScrumMaster/Change Agent
Feature team
Q/A’s role within Scrum
The Development Manager’s new role
Creating the Product Backlog
Emergent Requirements
User Stories
Story format
Conditions of satisfaction (Acceptance criteria)
Epics
Complex stories
Vertically slicing stories
Compound stories and spikes
A Brief Look at Use Cases
Release Planning
Estimating
Accuracy and Precision
Sprint length considerations
Establishing Velocity
Time and feature-driven releases
Assembling the initial release plan
Finalizing the initial release plan
Working within iterations
The definition of ‘team’
Sprint planning Part 1
Commitment-driven
Velocity-driven
Defining tasks
Creating the Sprint Backlog
Sprint planning Part 2
Executing the Spring
Development during a Sprint
Testing
Visual management
Taskboards
Burndown charts and signatures
Other visual methods
Handling interruptions
Holding Daily Scrums
Rules for cancelling a Sprint
Rules for escalation
Iteration reviews
What’s done should be ‘done’
Scaling Scrum and Product Ownership
Working Over Multiple Locations
Outsourcing and Globalization
Who should take this course?
This course is ideal for anyone in the organization, especially managers, developers and Q/A personnel who would like or need to learn the in-depth process of Scrum and how to use it within their organization.