In a Scrum project, every sprint begins
with Sprint Planning Meeting. The main objective should only be planning the
sprint. Ensure that the meeting is attended by the all team members including
the Product Owner, Scrum Master and the Scrum Team. You can also include part
time resources for this meeting. This provides an important opportunity for the
Scrum Team to select how much work they can do in the coming sprint.
Based on the Guide to Scrum Body of
Knowledge (SBOK Guide), it is time-boxed to eight hours for a one-month Sprint
and is divided into two parts - Objective Definition and Task Estimation.
1. Objective Definition—during the first
half of the meeting, the Product Owner explains the highest priority User
Stories or requirements in the Prioritized Product Backlog to the Scrum Team.
The Scrum Team in collaboration with the Product Owner then defines the Sprint
goal.
2. Task Estimation—during the second half
of the meeting, the Scrum Team decides “how” to complete the selected
Prioritized Product Backlog Items to fulfil the Sprint goal.
During Sprint Planning Meetings, the User
Stories, which are approved, estimated, and committed, are taken up for
discussion. Each Scrum Team member does a quick estimation of tasks using tools
such as planning poker. If the discussions start taking more time, it would
mean that the User stories were not completely ready to be taken up for the
sprint. Each
Scrum Team member also uses Effort Estimated Task List to select the tasks they
plan to work on in the Sprint, based on their skills and experience. The team reaches a consensus about the amount of work that need to
put in this sprint. The Scrum Team also creates the Sprint Backlog and Sprint Burndown Chart
using the User Stories and the Effort Estimated Task List during the Sprint
Planning Meetings. The team can give a verbal
commitment to complete the tasks planned for the sprint.
Try to avoid doing the following tasks
during the meeting. They help you for preparation and should be prepared before
the start of the meeting.
Grooming:
Grooming
helps ensure that refining of requirements and their User Stories is done well
in advance of the Sprint Planning Meeting so that the team has a well-analyzed and
clearly defined set of stories that can be easily broken down into tasks and
subsequently estimated.
Updates/Revisions: Updates can include
revisions to the original User Story estimates based on tasks creation and
complexity factors discussed during the Sprint Planning Meeting.
Bottom
line is that if you follow these points, you will be able to do effective
planning without spending a lot of time.
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