In my first article, I explained what Scrum Patterns are and why they could be useful for you in your transformation. The second article explained how to select the Scrum Patterns from the Pattern Languages.
In this 3rd article, I build on the previous two articles and give an example of how to use the two Pattern Languages to develop your pattern sequence.
How To Create Your Pattern Sequences?
A pattern sequence is the order of patterns in which the organization wants to transform. Organizations create their sequence by selecting the patterns that are most appropriate in their context.
But how can you determine the context? And how do you handle the relationships between the patterns?
Handling the Pattern Relationships
There are two relationships between patterns.
For example: In the graphic below, you can see that Sprint Burndown Chart, Scrum Board, and Yesterday’s Weather refine Sprint Backlog —a dependency relation. Before applying the Sprint Burndown Chart, I recommended using the Sprint Backlog first.
Also, the patterns Sprint Burndown Chart, Scrum Board, and Yesterday’s Weather are alternatives to each other —You can try any of those after Sprint Backlog.
For example, these are some valid sequences that are generated by the graphic above:
Finding the context at one of my customers
As mentioned above, you need to understand your current context to selects patterns and form a sequence. A way to determine that is to perform Go-See sessions and help the organization and teams understand it. Below you can find a small part of Go-See results from working with a customer and that we to understand the current context.
The team’s conclusions:
This excerpt portraits some of the contexts in which the teams operate.
Select The Patterns
In a workshop, the team selected the following patterns to try:
The next step is to create a sequence to decide which pattern to start.
Create the Patterns Sequences
Using the languages, we came up with the following possible sequences:
The orange-colored patterns are from the Value Stream language; the Swarming pattern —the blue one— is from the Product Organization language. The initial context of Swarming expects Sprint Goal to be adopted, that is why it is positioned after Sprint Goal.
The team started with the sequence: Refined Product Backlog -> Definition Of Done -> Testable Improvements..
Apply one pattern at a time
A sequence is your best guess on how to improve the organization at the moment in time. When you adopt a pattern, you will learn if it works or not. If it works, you keep it; if not, you backtrack and try another. The basic process is as follows:
Keep an experimental mindset, be ready to learn and adjust, and understand that there is no “best” sequence. A sequence shows a path, but the teams have to do the walking and discover how to implement it.
Create Your Own Pattern Language and Share
You can find the patterns in this post at scrumbook.org. If you decide to make use of the patterns, I look very much forward to your experience. You can create your own sequences, augment with your patterns, and create a language that works in your organization.
I am looking forward to your experience and contribution.
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