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What Are Story Points and Why Do We Use Them?
What Are Story Points and Why Do We Use Them?
Story points are a unit of measure for expressing an estimate of the effort required to fully implement a product backlog item or any other piece of work.
What Are Story Points and Why Do We Use Them?
How to Create a Good Definition of Done
How to Create a Good Definition of Done
Learn from our scrum experts on how to create a good definition of Done and why it’s so critical in ensuring incremental improvement in product development.
How to Create a Good Definition of Done
5 Steps to Find Your Definition of Done (With Examples and Workflows) | Planio
5 Steps to Find Your Definition of Done (With Examples and Workflows) | Planio
There’s a saying in the music industry that the easiest way to ruin a song is to keep working on it. Add enough effects, extra guitar parts, or more cowbell, and you’ll turn Woody Guthrie into Guns N’ Roses. Knowing when a piece of art is “done” is subjective and often difficult to define. But...
5 Steps to Find Your Definition of Done (With Examples and Workflows) | Planio
Fibonacci Agile Estimation
Fibonacci Agile Estimation
Fibonacci agile estimation quantifies the effort needed to complete a development task. Learn how to employ this method in your agile process.
Fibonacci Agile Estimation
What is Agile Estimation?
What is Agile Estimation?
Free scrum guide for agile scrum team. Learn about how agile estimation can be performed. More free scrum resources are available.
What is Agile Estimation?
What Is the Fibonacci Sequence?
What Is the Fibonacci Sequence?
From its origins to its significance, almost every popular notion about the famous Fibonacci sequence is wrong.
What Is the Fibonacci Sequence?
Planning fallacy - Wikipedia
Planning fallacy - Wikipedia
The planning fallacy is a phenomenon in which predictions about how much time will be needed to complete a future task display an optimism bias and underestimate the time needed. This phenomenon sometimes occurs regardless of the individual's knowledge that past tasks of a similar nature have taken longer to complete than generally planned. The bias affects predictions only about one's own tasks. On the other hand, when outside observers predict task completion times, they tend to exhibit a pessimistic bias, overestimating the time needed. The planning fallacy involves estimates of task completion times more optimistic than those encountered in similar projects in the past.
Planning fallacy - Wikipedia
Writing good sprint goals
Writing good sprint goals
Disclaimer: The content in this article is a mix from the references linked below and my personal experience. It is not meant to be an…
Writing good sprint goals