Agile Scrum Explained Simply

Agile Scrum Explained Simply
Agile Scrum Explained Simply

Agile is a project management philosophy, while Scrum is the structured, real-world framework used to put that philosophy into action. Think of Agile as a commitment to healthy living, and Scrum as the specific daily workout routine you follow to stay fit. Instead of planning a massive project from start to finish upfront, Scrum breaks the work down into small, manageable pieces delivered in short cycles.

The easiest way to understand Scrum is through the 3-5-3 Rule: 3 Roles, 5 Events, and 3 Artifacts.


👥 The 3 Roles

A standard Scrum team is small, cross-functional, and self-managing, meaning they have all the skills needed to complete the work without relying on outsiders.

  • Product Owner: The visionary. They understand customer needs, decide what needs to be built, and maintain the master to-do list.
  • Scrum Master: The coach. They do not manage the team; instead, they protect them from distractions, facilitate meetings, and clear roadblocks.
  • Developers: The builders. This includes the engineers, designers, or writers who do the hands-on work and decide how to build it.

📦 The 3 Artifacts

Artifacts are simply the tangible items or lists used to maintain transparency across the project.

  • Product Backlog: The ultimate master list of features, fixes, and requirements needed for the product, prioritized by value.
  • Sprint Backlog: The specific subset of items selected from the master list that the team commits to finishing during the current cycle.
  • Increment: The final, working piece of the product delivered at the end of a cycle that meets the team’s “Definition of Done”.

📅 The 5 Events (Ceremonies)

Scrum operates in time-boxed blocks called Sprints, which usually last 1 to 4 weeks. Each Sprint includes four distinct meetings:

  1. The Sprint: The time-box itself where the actual building happens.
  2. Sprint Planning: A meeting at the start of a Sprint where the team decides what they can realistically achieve and creates a plan.
  3. Daily Scrum (Stand-up): A quick, 15-minute daily meeting where developers sync on progress, plan the next 24 hours, and flag blockers.
  4. Sprint Review: A showcase held at the end of the Sprint to demo the working increment to stakeholders and gather feedback.
  5. Sprint Retrospective: An internal team meeting to review what went well, what went wrong, and how to improve the process for the next Sprint.

🏗️ Why Does Scrum Work?

Scrum relies entirely on Empiricism, meaning making decisions based on real-world evidence rather than guesswork. It stands firmly on three pillars:

  • Transparency: Everyone involved sees exactly what is happening.
  • Inspection: The team frequently stops to check the quality of the product and progress.
  • Adaptation: If something goes off-course, the team shifts direction immediately rather than blindly following an outdated plan.
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Author: Mark Whitfield

Welcome to my site! After graduating in Computing in 1990, I accepted a position as a programmer at a Runcorn based software house specialising in electronic banking software, namely sp/ARCHITECT-BANK on Tandem Computers (now HPE NonStop). This was before the internet became more prevalent and so the notion of enabling desktop access to company accounts for inter-account transfers and book keeping was still quite a cutting edge idea (and smartphones only ever hinted at in Space 1999). The company was called The Software Partnership (which was taken over by Deluxe Data in 1994). I spent 5 years in Runcorn developing code for SP/ARCHITECT for various banks like TSB, Bank of Scotland, Rabobank and Girofon (Denmark) to name but a few. I then moved onto a software house in Salford Quays for further bank facing projects. After a further 23 years in the IT industry and now a Senior IT Project Manager (both Agile and Waterfall delivery), I thought I would echo out my Career Profile in this corner of the internet for quick and easy access.

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