![]() ![]() Table of ContentsĪuthor(s): Pete Deemer, Gabrielle Benefield, Craig Larman and Bas Vodde. There are many concise descriptions of Scrum available online, and this primer aims to provide the next level of detail on the practices. Scrum emphasizes working product at the end of the Sprint that is really “done” in the case of software, this means a system that is integrated, fully tested, end-user documented, and potentially shippable. People obtain feedback that can be incorporated in the next Sprint. At the end of the Sprint, the Team reviews the Sprint with stakeholders, and demonstrates what it has built. It structures development in cycles of work called Sprints. Scrum is a development framework in which cross-functional teams develop products or projects in an iterative, incremental manner. These concepts increase agility and feedback, enable earlier ROI, and reduce risk. Scrum packages proven product-development concepts in a simple framework, including: real teams, cross-functional teams, self-managing teams, short iterative full-cycle feedback loops, and lowering the cost of change. “The Scrum Primer: A Lightweight Guide to the Theory and Practice of Scrum” by Pete Deemer, Gabrielle Benefield, Craig Larman and Bas Vodde.
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