Have you ever heard about SCRUM?
Did you know that you could highly improve your product management and product development efficiency?
Scrum is a lightweight, iterative and incremental framework for managing complex work. Scrum refers to a set of tools and techniques which work in concert to help teams construct and manage their own jobs.
The framework enables teams to self-organize by encouraging physical co-location or close online collaboration of all team members, as well as daily face-to-face communication.
Scrum adopts an evidence-based empirical approach. Empiricism states that knowledge comes from experience and that decisions are based on what is known.
There are three pillars that support each implementation of empirical process control:
Transparency- Significant aspects of the process must be visible to those responsible for the work. Transparency requires that those aspects be defined by a common standard so that observers can share and understand them.
Inspection- Whoever uses Scrum must frequently inspect the artifacts produced and the progress made towards the achievement of the predetermined objectives, thus identifying any discrepancies with the product's blueprint.
Adaptation- If the inspector verifies that one or more aspects of the production process are outside the acceptable limits, they must intervene on the process itself or on the material produced by the processing.
This is only a foretaste of what you'll find in "Scrum: a Step by Step Guide to Learn Scrum" by Gabriel Eaton, also author of "Lean Six Sigma" and "Lean Startup".
The contents include:
- what is Scrum
- benefits of Scrum
- what is visual Scrum and how is it applied
- mistakes to avoid
- Scrum compared to extreme programming
...and much more!
Scroll up and add to cart "Scrum: a Step by Step Guide to Learn Scrum" by Gabriel Eaton!