So what did I do to become
"Agile"? And yes, all of my assignments had nothing to do with
software.
In case you didn't know, agile was not invented for software
developing. In 1930s a small company known as "Toyota" changed the
typical way the organization used to work and started something new called
"Lean" - you can read about it in this article.
I adopted the agile
methodology in to the world of my course.
My team always worked in
scrum so daily meetings, retro's, review's, backlog and user stories are always
on my mind. However scrum doesn't give you the tools to deal with sudden tasks
(like supporting production applications or fixing production faults). Kanban
on the other hand does. In order to succeed I need them both. So like a true
agile believer I was creative.
I had to solve these problems:
1. Plan ahead the way I deal with my projects.
2. Improve all the time in completing all kind of tasks.
3. being able to set tasks for every day and keep history of my
daily progress.
4. Understand which projects I give more focus and which I
"forget".
Introducing
ScrumBan!
1. Daily meetings - Every day I took 5 minutes to plan
my day - I wrote down on a piece of paper (introducing: "The daily
paper") all the tasks I had to do today and where they belong (sudden
tasks, course assignments, project task). I kept it with me all the time so I'd
know what my status is.
How could I know
which tasks I had to do and when? Backlog!
2. Backlog - As I received my
mission (the project) I divided it to features (if it was possible) - individual
parts that together complete the whole mission. Every feature I divided to user
stories and every user story to tasks. I set the priority of every task in
order to know which to pick in my daily
meeting.
3. Retro - I didn't have sprints because the
course lasts only for 10 weeks, so I performed a retro every day (yes, it was
with only with myself). I looked at my daily paper and checked which tasks I've
completed and which I had not and why.
The next day I focused on
improving the reason of not completing those tasks.
4. Review - whenever I completed a feature I
showed it to my "customer" my teacher (he’s not really a teacher but
that will do) and got the feedback, good, bad or both. Only after a fixing all
the comments from the review the feature was “done”.
5. Kanboard - I wanted to get transparency. To
know what I did every day, which tasks took most of my focus. The daily paper
was updated during the day, marking completed tasks in green color and those
that for some reason I didn't finish were parked in red. Every task was
connected to it “User Story” mission or project so I could see what projects had
more focus. The next day I would focus on other tasks more.
The daily paper was my kanboard.
-blue marker = done tasks
-red circle = not done tasks
-yellow = user story
-prioriry (on the left column) = the highest number means the highest prioriry
-conclusion = conclusions of the day and the goal for the next day
Using all those helped me focus on the right tasks and always
improve myself.
The course hasn't end yet so I can't really declare that doing
those was a smart move. Don’t worry. I'll let you know.
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