What does a poor scrum team look, act and feel like?

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5 minute read

Sure, there are poor practices that impact scrum teams, but I tend to focus on the outcomes to determine whether a scrum team is failing or progressing.

What does a poor scrum team look, act and feel like?

Dysfunctional team behaviour

Autocracy

An example of a poor outcome would be a scrum team that has a lead developer who insists on imposing their will on others, fails to listen to others and take their expertise into account, and insists that others do what they are told, when they are told.

I would argue that this isn’t a team, it’s a dictatorship and you aren’t going to get great results out of that team regardless of whether they are doing scrum or not. It doesn’t support experimentation, innovation, or progression at all.

Dysfunctional Product Owner

I once worked with a team where they got roasted by customers and product stakeholders during the sprint review. The customers and stakeholders were irate and wanted to know why the team had built what they had built, in the way they had chosen to build it.

What you would expect in a healthy scrum team is for the product owner to take ownership of that situation, stand before the scrum team and describe what happened, why it happened, and to recalibrate and reconnect with what customers and stakeholders wanted to see.

  • Apologise on behalf of the team.

  • Ask questions around what customers would like to see in the future?

  • Ask questions around what specifically went wrong and why it is disappointing?

  • Document the responses to address with the team in the sprint retrospective.

Instead, the product owner in this environment turned on the team and demanded explanations from them as if she were just as irate and confused as the customers and stakeholders.

In essence accusing the developers of being at fault for failing to understand what customers wanted and needed, and that they are responsible for the quality and relevance of the product rather than the product owner.

A dysfunctional product owner will act as if the team failed to interpret their guidance and direction correctly, and pretend as if they have no control over what is produced and when it is delivered.

The antithesis of product ownership.

A product owner can prove dysfunctional in several other ways too, each of which result in poor performances from the team, low morale, and consistent failure to achieve a product goal or vision.

  • No trust between product owner, the developers, and customers/stakeholders.

  • No respect between product owner, the developers, and customers/stakeholders.

  • No commitment to producing valuable, working increments to customers/stakeholders.

  • No openness and transparency in the team or customer environment.

What does great look like?

According to Patrick Lencioni  , a great team is such a force multiplier for an organization but they are quiet rare.

Yes, we can point to poor behaviours and practices of an underperforming scrum team but it is hard to find and showcase great scrum teams around the world because so few organizations create an environment for them to thrive.

Sure, in professional sports we see great teams in action all of the time and can point to their high-performance and high-achievement as a great example of teamwork in action, but in the corporate world, there are few organizations that invest heavily in developing great teams.

It is really hard to grow a high-performance team because most organizations set teams up for failure. Agile, as an ideology, was developed for this very reason.

Traditional management and project management does not breed high-performance teams, nor does it provide room for flexibility, growth, experimentation, and development of a team for them to become a high-performing team.

So, the challenge isn’t so much pointing out what a poor scrum team looks like, it’s more about identifying all the barriers and constraints that exist in the client environment that would prevent a group of people forming a high-performing team.

An example of organizational dysfunction.

Microsoft, under Steve Balmer, had to stack rank each of their reports within a team or department.

Based on those assessments, the bottom 10% of each team were removed from the team at the end of each year in accordance with the organizational policy that had been created.

If this happened to an individual three times in a row, they were fired.

Just this simple policy meant that there were no incentives for people to work together, as a team, because regardless of how great the team performed, if you found yourself at the bottom 10%, you were out.

The incentive for office politics, backstabbing, and so forth was far higher.

Trip someone up and watch them fall to protect your own career.

There is no way that a team can thrive or grow and develop into a high-performing team over a couple of years because the organizational policies created and nurtured dysfunctional behaviours.

Great teams build great products that delight customers, and so the incentive to build environments where great teams can thrive exists is high. As a scrum master, agile coach, or agile consultant, it is important that you focus on all elements of team development rather than focusing exclusively on how well the team are executing scrum events.

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the hypothetical question was what does a poor scrum team look like and unfortunately that’s how well it depends answer as well right because it’s not it’s not the things the team well there are some things that I would almost always categorically put in the not good category but sometimes most of the time it’s the the outcomes that are bad so for example a poor scrum team might be um you’ve got some lead developer who’s always imposing their will on everybody else in the team doesn’t listen to what everybody else says and expects everybody to just do what he tells them to do there’s there’s a there’s that and I would just say that’s just not a team right does not necessarily need the scrum part it’s just not a team um or my favorite favorite example of a dysfunctional scrum behavior that I use a lot is actually the a dysfunctional product owner um and during a Sprint review the customer is a little bit the stakeholders are a little bit irate because they didn’t get something they the way they want it and they demanded of the the scrum team why did you build it that way and what you would expect to see in a healthy scrum team is that the product owner would be then standing in front of the stakeholders um defending or apologizing for whatever the problem was and asking how would you like it to be different how what could we do differently in order to be able to support what you need right or we’re not going to do it that way because that’s not the direction of the product but it’s the product owners responsibility to to to make that stand but that’s not what happened in the case that I’m thinking of the product owner turned to the development team and said yeah why did you build it that way basically totally passing passing the buck to the development team and saying it’s your fault that you didn’t understand what the customer said and I translated for you and you didn’t build it the way I said that’s just what what the hell right that that’s not there’s no trust there there’s no respect there there’s no commitment there there’s no openness there pretty much totally divested of the scrum values and they weren’t doing very good scrum either so I think there’s a myriad of examples of what what does a bad scrum team look like and there’s actually very few examples of what does a good scrum team look like because there Patrick lisione one of the things that that he said is that that great teams are such a Force multiplier for companies because they’re so rare right it’s actually really hard to create great teams because most organizations set you up for failure the the the the a policy be used used to have in in Microsoft years ago under Steve Baumer was that every manager had to stack rank every one of their direct reports every year and at the end of that year based on the stack rank the bottom 10 were out of the team if you were out of the team out of out of a team three times in a row you wrote the company so what’s the incentive for people to work together right isn’t that an incentive for them to try and stab each other in the back what was the incentive for for you as a as a leader to build a great team well I can’t build a great team because I’m going to lose 10 every year so I need mostly a great team and some cannon fodder that are going to get lost right and how does that make the cannon father feel or the rest of the people in the team feel it just totally depresses the ability for the organization to create value because mediocre teams or bad teams don’t build great products amazing teams build amazing products great teams built great products so you need to have an environment within which teams are able to to be like that and that that’s not about imposing processes and tools on them even even scrum you don’t impose it on a team they need to choose it um it means not focusing on everybody have the most comprehensive documentation ever right you need that’s not going to help and you need to not focus on on on contracts contracts don’t solve your problems contracts are just working agreements right they’re a working agreement between two companies so they don’t deal each other over so that they have an agreement on how we’re going to work and as soon as you start enshrining ways of working like ways of people working what you’re going to deliver how you’re going to deliver in the contract you’re starting to constrain the ability for the teams to choose a way of working that best suits what they discover when they’re doing the work so I think it’s easy to see how organizations fail to deliver value because they’re not actually focused on value they’re they’re focused on treating uh these teams that are meant to be generating value as a cost center rather than a Value Center and that’s what results in in poor quality teams in unhappy people and shitty products

Transparency Agile Project Management Scrum Product Development People and Process Product Owner Scrum Team Agile Frameworks Software Development Team Collaboration Team Performance

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