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by MattGaiser
2215 days ago
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More just a consequence of an project that is generally going well (or at least was) and a lot of prior autonomy. Plenty of weeks there has been nothing to say. We had a sprint planning (he isn’t on the development team for that), we completed the sprint, we did it again. Nothing to report. In the office, it is a nice amount of autonomy to not have to provide yet another status update all the time. The project team already has enough Scrum reporting requirements so it works well to keep the admin burden down. You just have to wonder if you are forgotten when working remotely. |
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1) Providing updates on things going on with the rest of the organization that may affect you. Technically this doesn't have be in a 1:1, but is often a good venue. 2) Learning more about any problems facing the team, and discussing potential solutions. 3) Giving feedback on both what the employee has been doing well and any areas they could improve. 4) Helping to set goals that will advance the employees career goals.
While you might be able to get everything done well with lots of autonomy, you're probably still leaving value on the table by not meeting more regularly.