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Cut the Waste: how Lean Thinking powers Scrum

September 11, 2025
Waste hides in “the way we’ve always done it.” In Scrum, Lean thinking is about spotting waste—whether it’s defects, overproduction, bloated backlogs, or wasted talent—and making it smaller, less important, or gone. Here’s how to see it, reduce it, and free your team’s focus.
Blog Post

Why You Cannot Combine SAFe and LeSS

September 11, 2025
Mixing SAFe and LeSS inside one product does not work. LeSS is not just a framework but a full organizational design that demands deep structural change. This article explains why SAFe and LeSS conflict and when it is possible to pilot both in the same company.
Blog Post

Stuck with Legacy Code? An Agile Approach to Transform with AI

September 11, 2025
A modern, agile approach to transforming legacy software, which is often too risky for a complete rewrite is possible. The strategy combines three key elements: the Strangler Fig Pattern, an incremental method of building new services around an old system; AI-powered code generation tools like Blitzy and Claude, which automate the bulk of the coding work; and the Scrum framework, which provides the framework for managing this complex, iterative process. I emphasize that this approach not only mitigates risk but also redefines feedback loops in product development, turning them into a source of creative input and personal growth rather than just criticism.
Blog Post

Pricing as a Hypothesis: Testing Value with Scrum

September 11, 2025
Pricing is a hypothesis about value, willingness-to-pay, and customer behavior. In this blog, we explore TAP’s pricing formula and show how Scrum Teams can run lightweight experiments, fake doors, A/B tests, and packaging trials, to validate pricing early. Treating pricing like backlog items ensures empiricism guides not only what we build, but also how we sustain value.
Blog Post

Context for the Agile Product Operating Model (APOM) and New Survey

September 10, 2025
This blog post introduces a survey about the Agile Product Operating Model (APOM). Dave West explains that Scrum.org is investing in APOM due to challenges organizations face with Product Ownership and the limitations of project-based approaches for managing digital assets. Many organizations, despite calling themselves "product organizations," still operate within a project culture, leading to misaligned and disempowered product teams. APOM aims to provide a unified set of ideas, bringing together Scrum, Nexus, EBM, and modern product thinking to help organizations align, fund, and operate their "products" more effectively. The author emphasizes that APOM is not a prescriptive methodology but a framework of ideas that organizations must adapt to their own context, and encourages participation in the survey to further develop this body of knowledge.
Blog Post

Yes, We Have a Product And…

September 10, 2025
Defining product in Scrum is a fundamental choice. A narrow scope gives focus but risks local optimization. A broad scope brings adaptability and customer-centricity but may blur priorities and vision. The right balance turns Scrum into a true driver of business transformation.
Blog Post

アジャイルマニフェストの最初の一文を再発見する:謙虚さ、実験、そして経験主義

September 10, 2025
アジャイルマニフェストの最初の一文――「私たちは、ソフトウェア開発の実践、あるいは実践を手助けをする活動を通じて、よりよい開発方法を見つけだそうとしている」――は、しばしば見過ごされがちですが、その核心には謙虚さと好奇心があります。「アジャイル開発」は完成したレシピではなく、探求のマインドセットです。今日、多くの組織は「ベストプラクティス」に固執し、フレームワークを固定化してしまいます。しかし、複雑な課題に必要なのは経験主義――仮説を立て、実験し、振り返り、次を決めることです。実際に、スクラムを一時的にやめてみたチームが「スプリントゴールの価値」を再発見した事例や、製薬会社の部門が小規模チーム構造を試し、効果を確認した事例があります。アジャイルは、組織運営においても継続的な実験と改善を求めています。
Blog Post

Rediscovering the First Line of the Agile Manifesto: Humility, Experimentation, and Empiricism

September 10, 2025
The first line of the Agile Manifesto—“We are uncovering better ways of developing software by doing it and helping others do it”—captures the humility and curiosity of its authors, yet it is often overlooked. Agile was born as a mindset of exploration, not a recipe of fixed practices. Today, many organizations confuse “good practices” with “best practices,” clinging to frameworks like Scrum, SAFe, or the “Spotify model” instead of running experiments to discover better ways of working. Complex problems such as delivering customer value or organizing teams require empiricism: forming hypotheses, running experiments, reflecting, and deciding what to do next. Two real-world stories illustrate this—one where a team paused Scrum to test Kanban and rediscovered the power of Sprint Goals, and another where a pharmaceutical department experimented with temporary small teams and learned that size and structure matter. Organizations thrive when they embrace curiosity, empiricism, and continuous experimentation.
Blog Post

Product Owners - 5 Tools to Build the RIGHT PRODUCT

September 9, 2025
In the world of Product Development, there are only two big problems which need to be solved: Are we building the right product? Are we building the product right? There are many approaches that help the developers to build the product in the right way, enabling great quality. However, building the Right Product is often challenging because it is not an issue of capability or technology but more often it is an issue that stems from a lack of understanding or working with assumptions.

Lienzo del Producto

September 6, 2025
Definir un producto es central a la mentalidad de producto. Hay muchos aspectos a considerar, como la visión de producto, objetivos de producto, métricas, modelos de negocio, entre otros. El siguiente canvas es una idea de cómo enfocar la definición de producto.
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The Spark of Life: How Products Really Begin

September 4, 2025
Every product begins with a spark: a frustration, a market gap, or even an accident. But sparks aren’t finished products; they’re hypotheses waiting to be tested. In The Anatomy of a Product, we call this the Spark of Life: the messy, human moment that reveals a problem worth exploring. Scrum gives us the perfect framework to nurture sparks responsibly: observe before you build, frame the problem clearly, and prototype to learn. Not every spark will grow into a product, but every product begins with one.
Blog Post

10 Ways to Help the Quiet Voices Be Heard in Scrum Events

September 4, 2025
A Scrum Team thrives when every voice is heard. Facilitators and Scrum Masters play a vital role in making space for quieter team members. With intention and a few well-tested techniques, we can shift the dynamic and bring more perspectives into the conversation. Sometimes the quietest voice in the room has the most important insight. From using silent writing and Liberating Structures to creating psychological safety and embracing silence, these ten approaches empower facilitators to create inclusive environments where all voices are heard. These strategies can help bring forward valuable perspectives that might otherwise go unnoticed, whether you're working with a reflective thinker or someone hesitant to share.
Blog Post

How Did We Ever Get By Without a Product Owner?

August 29, 2025
When I first started working with Scrum Teams, one of the things that struck me most was the Product Owner accountability. The Product Owner is accountable for maximizing the value of the product. It is simple but profound - they are ultimately accountable for the value that the product delivers.
Blog Post

Aligned Autonomy at Scale

August 29, 2025
“Aligned Autonomy” is a concept that aims to strike a balance between autonomous decision-making and alignment with organizational goals and values. What does Autonomy mean in a scaled environment with multiple teams? What does Alignment mean? How can we design an organization with aligned autonomy at scale?
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Scrum Doesn’t Guess. It Learns.

August 28, 2025
Scrum doesn’t suggest—it asserts—that knowledge comes from experience. Not analysis paralysis, not over-planning, not theorizing. Real insight comes from doing. Here’s why that matters more than ever.
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When Bugs Become an Organizational Smell + Problem - A Real World Example

August 27, 2025
The article uses an example to illustrate how tying individual bonuses to the number of high-priority bugs leads to unhealthy behaviors, like manipulating bug priorities and avoiding accountability. The core issue is not software bugs themselves but the management practice that creates perverse incentives and damages collaboration and quality culture. It recommends focusing on collective learning, root cause analysis, and sharing knowledge, instead of linking personal targets to bug counts.
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User Stories Sometimes Do More Harm Than Good

August 22, 2025
User stories are one way to describe Product Backlog items, but too often they’re misused or forced into every situation. The original intent, from Extreme Programming, was about sparking collaboration through the 3 Cs: Card, Conversation, Confirmation, not filling in a rigid template. Scrum doesn’t prescribe a single format, and alternatives like Job Stories or Hypothesis-Driven Development can be more effective depending on the context. At the end of the day, the value comes from the conversation, not the wording.
Blog Post

Der KI-Papagei in Ihrem Sprint 🇩🇪

August 21, 2025
Ihr LLM-Tool denkt nicht. Es ist ein statistischer KI-Papagei: ausgeklügelt und mithilfe von Millionen von Gesprächen trainiert – aber dennoch ein Papagei. Teams, die mit KI scheitern, verstehen das entweder nicht oder tun so, als ob es keine Rolle spielen würde. Beide Fehler sind kostspielig.
Blog Post

Product Owners - Are You Using the Right Personas?

August 20, 2025
In order to create valuable and useful products, it is necessary for the Product Owner to understand the needs and expectations of the customer. However, it is not always possible to have direct access to the end user. And that could create some challenges. In scenarios, where the Product Owner does not have a direct access to the end customer, they will have to rely on other approaches to build an hypothesis of the needs and expectations of the customer. In this article I explore one such approach - Personas.
Blog Post

Before You Pull More Work into the Sprint

August 18, 2025
If you’ve ever been a Developer on a Scrum Team, you’ve probably experienced this moment: you’ve completed all of the work you originally planned for the Sprint, and there are still a few days left. What now? It might seem like a good idea to just pull more work into the Sprint, but that sometimes causes more harm than good.
Blog Post

The Statistical AI Parrot in Your Sprint

August 17, 2025
Your LLM tool doesn’t think. It’s a statistical AI parrot: sophisticated and trained on millions of conversations—but still a parrot. Teams that fail with AI either don’t understand this or act as if it doesn’t matter. Both mistakes are costly.
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The Crossroads of Product Ownership and AI

August 14, 2025
A few years ago the buzz word in the Software Industry was #Agile, then came #Devops and now certainly the word that is ruling the roost is #AI. In these changing times where the lines are getting blurred and roles are evolving at a rapid pace; how can Product Ownership remain untouched by AI.

Consideraciones para el refinamiento en Scrum

August 14, 2025
El refinamiento es una práctica saludable en Scrum para mejorar la transparencia del Product Backlog y la entrega de valor. Hay muchas prácticas, técnicas y herramientas para llevarlas a cabo, sin embargo, su ejecución debe llevarse a cabo teniendo en consideración algunos aspectos que se muestran a continuación:
Blog Post

Scrum Masters are Worth Every Penny

August 12, 2025
If you are thinking about "saving money" by eliminating the Scrum Master, think again! They are the glue that holds the Scrum Team together. What are good communication, effective events and a focus on value worth, after all? A pretty penny, I'd say.
Blog Post

A Wake-Up Call: Will Scrum Masters Still Exist in 5 Years?

August 12, 2025
The Scrum Master role is at risk of fading away unless the profession changes. Too many organizations misunderstand the accountability, reducing it to administrative tasks instead of leadership. The Scrum Masters who will thrive are those who grow beyond facilitation, actively protect empiricism, influence at the organizational level, and focus on delivering real outcomes. This article explores the challenges facing Scrum Masters today and the skills they need to remain relevant in the years ahead.
Blog Post

A Shift in Agile’s North Star: From Speed to Value

August 12, 2025
There is an annual "State of Agile" report which has been produced by Digital.ai for the past 17 years. One of the most interesting questions that is asked in this survey is "Why did your company adopt Agile"?. What I find fascinating is that for 14 of the last 17 years, the answer has almost always been something along the lines of "Accelerate Time to Market" or "Accelerate Software Delivery". Last year, for the first time, the answer changed pretty significantly.
Blog Post

Agile KI-Agenten 🇩🇪

August 7, 2025
Ich habe den neuen Agentenmodus von ChatGPT ausprobiert: Handelt es sich wirklich um einen agilen KI-Agenten, der selbstständig bemerkenswerte Signale im täglichen Kommunikations- und Datenrauschen erkennt?