From the course: Agile Software Development
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The scrum pillars (TIA)
From the course: Agile Software Development
The scrum pillars (TIA)
- Scrum teams plan their work around what they know based on evidence and their experience at that specific point in time, and they continue to adjust their plan as they learn new facts. Scrum is based on three key styles of execution. Think of these as the three pillars of Scrum, transparency, inspection, and adaptation or TIA. These three pillars support each other. Any aspect of Scrum can only be inspected if it is visible, so transparency at every stage is crucial. You can only inspect something if it is transparent and you can only adapt something that you can inspect. Transparency is achieved by making every aspect of the work, such as artifacts, processes, products, or issues, just to name a few, visible to those that could be impacted. Scrum events are designed to inspect every aspect of the product and processes to build it. Inspection is followed by adaptation. Scrum teams adapt their work and approach to fix deviation from their desired goal or to continuously improve the…
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Contents
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Scrum introduction4m 24s
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Empiricism3m 6s
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The scrum pillars (TIA)3m 19s
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Scrum values1m 54s
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Scrum roles: The product owner1m 48s
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Scrum roles: The development team member1m 58s
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Scrum roles: The scrum master1m 52s
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Scrum events1m 40s
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Scrum artifacts: The product backlog3m 43s
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Scrum artifacts: The sprint backlog and increment1m 47s
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Common myths2m 28s
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