[Sigia-l] Agile, Scrum and UX?

Jonathan Baker-Bates jonathan at bakerbates.com
Sat Mar 21 18:36:18 EDT 2015


As a one-time Agile Alliance Certified Scrum Master, I would say that
as long as both the pigs and the chickens all agree with the
definition of "done", then that's fine. However, the default in scrum
is always to produce production ready *code* (not wireframes or
personas) at the end of every sprint, and from the very first sprint.
See antipattern 16 (from the standard texts on the subject):

http://www.agileadvice.com/2011/12/05/referenceinformation/24-common-scrum-pitfalls-summarized/

... and of course the endless debates that produces!

https://www.scrum.org/Forums/aft/1273

But we digress here.

@Tom: are we helping at all, or should we just can it?

Jonathan




On 21 March 2015 at 22:21, magia3e at gmail.com <magia3e at gmail.com> wrote:
> Scrum's Sprints don't have to focus on software. It can be used to deliver anything that the Product Owner dedices is of value. A whole Sprint's Increment may just be dedicated to learning with 'knowledge products'.
>
> The idea behind 'production ready' is that what ever is created is fully complete within the confines of the Sprint to what ever standard the quality/satisfaction criteria (Definition of Done) specifies.
>
> Things that are not software have been delivered using Scrum
>
> * The SAAB Gripen fighter jet was made with Scrum.
>
> * The wikispeed car
>
> I've delivered UX consulting recommendations papers using Scrum whose tram was only ux people. Each Increment consisted of 'production ready' personas, tree structures and prototypes because that was the outcome sought by the Product Owner by the client. These would be used much later to help guide a web project.
>
> M
>
>
> Sent from my HTC
>
> ----- Reply message -----
> From: "Skot Nelson" <skot at penguinstorm.com>
> To: "SIG Information Architecture" <sigia-l at asis.org>
> Subject: [Sigia-l] Agile, Scrum and UX?
> Date: Sun, Mar 22, 2015 6:54 AM
>
> Yes.
>
> There notion that "every sprint results in production ready code" seems antithetical to agile itself.
> --
> Skot Nelson
> http://www.penguinstorm.com/
> twitter. penguinstorm
>
>> On Mar 21, 2015, at 12:35, Thomas Donehower <tdonehower at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> print yields production ready software?  Are you saying there could be sprints that are devoted to just prototyping for example
>
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