| > If you aren't following the Scrum practices, then you aren't doing Scrum. For better or worse. Dogma. > It's like baking a cake without adding sugar; it's not really a cake anymore. Nonsense. > No doubt they weren't getting value out of them This piece goes against this piece: > , but that doesn't mean they were doing things well and they lost opportunity to improve as a group. Why would you continue to follow a process you don't find value in? If you didn't like a process, why would you feel like bringing that process up in a process-oriented equally-useless meeting? This is the dogmatism. "Well even though the meeting wasn't valuable you still should've tried". To what end? > For context, currently, I manage a team of 60ish without Scrum. I see Scrum as a bit dated now. Less interested in size, more interested in throughput/attrition. |
> Nonsense
You may think Scrum is dogma, but my statements are factually true by reasonable definitions of the terms.
>Why would you continue to follow a process you don't find value in? If you didn't like a process, why would you feel like bringing that process up in a process-oriented equally-useless meeting? This is the dogmatism. "Well even though the meeting wasn't valuable you still should've tried". To what end?
Strawman.
I'm afraid you'll have to take my word for it that the team where just bad at it. They got better with coaching and even managed to see some value.
The values behind the process are more important. This team just weren't talking to each other about their own performance.
> throughput/attrition
Of staff or customers? Attrition is very low of both. Not sure it's that relevant though. 3 engineers have left in the last 2 years and one of those three is returning. Is that a good thing?
As for throughput, even the slowest of teams ship on a daily basis. Not sure what other context you could mean.