DocumentCode
652634
Title
ScrumBut, But Does it Matter? A Mixed-Method Study of the Planning Process of a Multi-team Scrum Organization
Author
Heikkila, Ville T. ; Paasivaara, Maria ; Lassenius, Casper
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Aalto Univ., Helsinki, Finland
fYear
2013
fDate
10-11 Oct. 2013
Firstpage
85
Lastpage
94
Abstract
Context: Proponents of the Scrum software development method use the term "Scrum But" to refer to harmful changes to Scrum. Scrum has been increasingly adopted in large software development organizations. This has led to changes to Scrum practices, but it is not known if these changes are harmful. Objective: We studied how the requirements were planned and managed in the development teams of a large Scrum organization, how well the requirements planning and management practices matched Scrum, and whether the changes were perceived harmful. Method: We quantitatively analysed 435 requirements spanning a time period of approximately one year. We conducted a total of 40 interviews to study the Scrum adoption in the organization and to explain and validate the quantitative results. Results: The main discrepancies between the organization\´s practices and Scrum were the pacing of the planning process, which was more akin to a continuous process instead of the iteration-paced Scrum model, and the average time it took to develop requirements, which was considerably longer than the time prescribed by Scrum. The latter discrepancy was considered slightly harmful. Conclusion: Changes to the Scrum practices should be evaluated in their context to separate harmful ones from necessary or beneficial changes mandated by the organizational context.
Keywords
iterative methods; organisational aspects; software development management; Scrum adoption; Scrum software development method; iteration paced Scrum model; mixed method study; multiteam scrum organization; organizational context; planning process; requirements planning; software development organizations; Context; Electronics packaging; Interviews; Organizations; Planning; Software; Statistical analysis; Scrum; large-scale agile software development; release planning; software engineering;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Empirical Software Engineering and Measurement, 2013 ACM / IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Baltimore, MD
ISSN
1938-6451
Print_ISBN
978-0-7695-5056-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ESEM.2013.27
Filename
6681341
Link To Document