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The ‘house’ of Scrum? … A house, indeed!

Albeit having no graphical skills, I understand the power of visualization.

In 2011 I intuitively used a house as a representation and metaphor for Scrum and an environment of Scrum. I used my "house of Scrum" in the 1st edition and 2nd edition of my book "Scrum - A Pocket Guide" (2013-2019). Today it still expresses my intuition. But repeatedly being asked "Why a house?" became an invitation to explain my intuition.

A house, indeed. When I get asked why a house, people often point me to other representations that in my view are more of a temple. And, while temples may be great environments, they are places where people go for silence, step out of the world for a while, to meditate, to pray, or to worship and worse. To represent an environment of Scrum, I like a house more. A house is a place where people live, talk, do stuff, interact, collaborate. Or take a break, rest and reflect, as needed.

The walls of my house of Scrum represent the main activities of Scrum, inspection and adaptation. The foundation of the house, the foundation for those main activities, is transparency. Transparency determines the strength of the walls and the house. The inspection-and-adaption process of Scrum depends and builds on transparency, while at the same time enhancing it. The roof of the house of Scrum protects the inhabitants from external circumstances and disturbances. It is the Increment that keeps us safe. Its Done-ness determines how well we are protected from rain, thunder, storm, snow, or heat waves.

In the house of Scrum we perform creative work, aka development. We 'create' rather than build or produce (it is not a manufacturing line). The behavior of the inhabitants is what influences the dynamics of the creative process within the house the most. The way that the inhabitants enact Scrum is determined by much more than just knowing the rules of Scrum. The liveliness, the vivacity, the agility inside of the house depend on how the inhabitants act upon an understanding of the combination of rules, principles and values of Scrum, and the tactics they chose to apply.

I wholeheartedly welcome you in the house of Scrum. We can use all help in re-humanizing the workplace!

Get your poster of the house of Scrum from my website.


Source


Published at pmmagazine.net with the consent of the author

Gunther Verheyen

About author

independent Scrum Caretaker

Gunther Verheyen is a longtime Scrum practitioner. After a standing career as a consultant, he became partner to Ken Schwaber (Scrum co-creator) and Director of the Professional series at Scrum.org. Gunther nowadays engages with people and organizations as an independent Scrum Caretaker.

Gunther ventured into IT and software development after graduating in 1992. His Agile journey started with eXtreme Programming and Scrum in 2003. Years of dedication and employing Scrum in diverse circumstances followed. As from 2010 Gunther became the inspiring force behind some large-scale enterprise transformations. In 2011 he became a Professional Scrum Trainer.

Gunther left consulting in 2013 to found Ullizee-Inc and partner exclusively with Ken Schwaber, co-creator of Scrum. He represented Ken and Scrum.org in Europe, shepherded the ‘Professional Scrum’ series and guided Scrum.org’s global network of Professional Scrum Trainers. Gunther is co-creator to Agility Path, EBMgtTM (Evidence-Based Managing of Software) and the Nexus framework for Scaled Professional Scrum.

Since 2016 Gunther continues his journey as an independent Scrum Caretaker; a connector, writer, speaker, humanizer. His services build on 15+ years of experience, ideas, beliefs and observations of Scrum. Gunther helps people re-imagine their Scrum to re-emerge their organization and firm up their agility.

Gunther created the acclaimed book “Scrum – A Pocket Guide” in 2013 and published a 2nd edition in 2019. Ken Schwaber recommends it as ‘the best description of Scrum available’ and ‘extraordinarily competent’. In 2016 the Dutch translation was published as “Scrum Wegwijzer” and in 2017 the German translation as “Scrum Taschenbuch”. More translations are forecasted.

When not travelling for Scrum and humanizing the workplace, Gunther lives and works in Antwerp (Belgium). More at https://guntherverheyen.com/about/.

 

Books


Gunther is the author of the acclaimed book “Scrum – A Pocket Guide” (2013), which was recommended by Ken Schwaber as “the best description of Scrum currently available". A second edition was published in 2019 and a third edition is planned for 2021.

 

 Gunther Verheyen Book
 
Gunther Verheyen Book
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