Thursday 3 April 2014

The Scrum Task Board Explained

The scrum task board
The scrum board is the main object of interest for the entire scrum team, since each activity carried out using scrum methodology is reflected directly or indirectly on the scrum board. It is generally located in the venue where the daily scrum meetings or the daily stand ups are held before the sprint is initiated for the particular day. Scrum boards are the center point of focus for the entire team. The sprint backlog, in the form of story cards, is represented on it. Each day as the sprint progresses, the scrum board reflects the updates of work carried out by the development team. As the user stories develop, the cards are rotated on the board, and provide information to the team as to which particular activity is currently being undertaken and processed. In real time, the scrum board is updated before the sprint commences for the particular day, and it typically exhibits the sprint activity carried out the day before.   
 
scrum

Story
The story column displays the list of user stories taken up for development during the sprint. "User stories" is the work accepted by the team during the sprint planning meeting. Each user story is broken down into development tasks, and each task is individually taken up for development by the team member during the sprint.
 
To Do
The column reflects the tasks taken up for immediate development from the sprint backlog. The backlog constitutes the entire work to be completed during the tenure of the sprint – over the coming days. The stories can be picked up on a random basis, or according to a specific plan followed by the team. The “To Do” list is populated by those stories which are to be considered for development on an immediate basis, unlike the entire sprint backlog which is processed in small segments.
 
In Process
This column is populated by those tasks which are currently being developed by the programmers or developers on the particular sprinting day. Ideally, the stories included in the column should be completed on the same day before it ends. However, if the task is complex, or lengthy, the task may be extended over the next day.
 
To Verify
This column includes the stories which have been taken up for development during the sprint, but need some further clarification before they can be taken up for development purposes. Also, when a particular task is taken up for programming and if some issue is found connected with it which prevents further development, the task is transferred to the “Verify” column. The doubts or the issues connected with the story are resolved by taking help from the scrum master or the product owner, and subsequently transferred to the “Story” column or the “To Do” column depending upon the team’s decision when to develop it.
 
Done
The column includes all the tasks which have been completed by the team during the sprint activity. During the sprint review meeting, the tasks included under the “Done” column are verified by the product owner and accepted as “Done” or rejected.
 
Find out more, and download our free QuickScrum tool which can help you in implementing scrum in an effective and profitable way!

No comments:

Post a Comment