Welcome to ScrumLab Open
ScrumLab Open is a free resource that explains the basic framework, roles and key patterns of Scrum. It includes clear definitions, insightful videos from the inventor of Scrum, as well as, published papers on Scrum Practices. ScrumLab open is perfect for the Scrum curious, the Scrum beginner or the advanced practitioner looking to refresh on the fundamentals.
We also offer a more in-depth online course: Scrum Startup for Teams.
You can also improve your Scrum by attending one of our Scrum Master or Scrum Product Owner classes. Advanced practitioners may be interested in reading Jeff Sutherland’s Scrum Papers, taking our Scrum@Scale training, or visiting the official Scrum@Scale site to download the latest Scrum@Scale Guide.
All ScrumLab Open Videos
All ScrumLab Open Topics
High Moon Wins Awards with Scrum
High Moon produced a great video on Scrum. Check it out! High Moon Studios, part of Vivendi Games, is a game developer currently working on titles for next-generation consoles. The company is founded by game veterans who are passionate about creating compelling,...
Why GANTT Charts Were Banned in the First Scrum
GANTT charts have some utility when a Product Owner has to present to naive users (non-Agile managers) to get a project funded. Once implementation of the plan starts, the team enters the fog of war, just like a squad of troops entering battle. Military generals fully...
New Innovations in ScrumMaster Training
ScrumMaster has developed a line of contact equipment for use in training aspects of the sport of rugby -- the world's foremost Scrum Machines. The principal aim in the development of these products is to provide teams with safe, effective tools with which to improve...
Scrum in the Gaming Industry
Game Development Enters the Scrum GameDAILY BIZ Tuesday, December 20, 2005 Clinton Keith, High Moon So many developers seem locked into traditional game making processes, but as game creation becomes more and more complex (and costly), alternative methodologies may be...
Why There Is No Rational Software Design Process
Tobias Mayer pointed out a classic paper in the scrumdevelopment group today. Parnas has created many papers that are now viewed as classics in the software development literature. This one points out many of the reasons why software development is an empirical...
Scrum: It’s not for small projects any more …
Microsoft Lauds 'Scrum' for Software Development Projects David K. Taft eWeek, 11 Nov 2005 When Microsoft launched its long-awaited database and tools products last week, the company acknowledged it would have to act faster to revise its products faster as customer...
Program Management with Scrum
Program Management with Scrum Training 13-14 October 2005 CLOSED New Balance Corporate Headquarters A good place to get Agile is at one of the leading athletic companies in the United States and in response to email with questions about this unique Advanced...
Management wants 11 months work done in 8 – how many additional resources do I need?
Developers are regularly faced with the conundrum of cramming 10 tons of work into a 5 ton bag. The latest version of this appeared on the Scrum Development list today. We have a 1500 point project. We have a 9 person team. We have an estimated velocity of 70 points a...
Pump Up Your Stock Options With Agile Methods!
David Rico sent around the latest version of his thesis proposal and it makes for an interesting read. Developers in many companies have stock options and want them to have real value. Rico argues that a company declaring publicly that it supports Agile methods can...
Agile Declaration of Independence
National Treasures of Agile Development Tue Jul 19 2005 02:34 PM By Robert Cowham, Steve Berczuk and Brad Appleton Introduction Recent research has discovered a very interesting cache of papers about a little known Tribe called the Agile Developers. The first document...
Scrum Influencers: Colin Angle, CEO of IRobot
Scrum origins include the work of Colin Angle. As an MIT student, he sublet space in 1990 at my Object Databases lab in Cambridge and had his early robots hunting me down in my office. I spent a lot of time understanding Rodney Brooks subsumption architecture and it...
The First Scrum Project Manager
John Scumniotales, the first ScrumMaster "The end of the project manager, the birth of the ScrumMaster, a transient job valid until the organization has changed and is self-managing." Ken Schwaber The quote from Ken Schwaber elequently describes the role of a project...
Scrum Evolution: What’s it all about?
Love it or hate it, the Agile 2005 Conference reviewers thought the paper below was either a major innovation or a gross violation of the principles (dogma) of Scrum. It's motto is innovate or die and only the paranoid survive in the global economy. Does it show the...
Attila II: Scrum Progenitor Honors Scrum Gathering
Attila II: Progenitor of Scrum, hotel@MIT The Scrum Gathering this week is at hotel@MIT in Cambridge. I'm sitting in on a ScrumMaster training course led by Ken Schwaber. We plan on doing one together at PatientKeeper in Boston in August. This would be a great...
Scrum: Where Did Rapid Application Development Come From?
IEEE Computer published an issue on agile development in 2003. Of particular interest is an article on the history of iterative development, highly recommended for anyone interested in the background Agile methods. Most of the "Rapid Application Development (RAD)"...
Scrum Godfathers: Takeuchi and Nonaka
Takeuchi and Nonaka are Godfathers of the Scrum Agile Process since they coined the term in their seminal paper in the Harvard Business Review in 1986: Takeuchi, H. and I. Nonaka, The New New Product Development Game. Harvard Business Review, 1986(January-February)....
Scrum Evolution: Type A, B, and C Sprints
One of the key influences that led to creation of the first Scrum was a paper on the Japanese way of new product development by Takeuchi and Nonaka [2]. This paper had a chart showing product development separated into silo’s (Type A), phases slightly...
Scrum: Involving the Customer
Creation of the Agile Manifesto at Snowbird 2001 There was a dialogue in the scrumdevelopment group today on how customers should be involved with Scrum teams, prompting me to regurgitate a few of the examples I have been involved in since the first Scrum in 1993....
Google Gmail
Now that I have given away Gmail accounts to anyone on the PatientKeeper development team who wants one, I have a few more to pass on to people in the Scrum community. If you have been looking for a Gmail account, send me a note. First come, first serve.
Scrum: Subsumption Architecture and Emergent Behavior
PicBot exhibiting emergent behavior Yesterday's posting on the birth of Scrum generated some questions on Rodney Brooks' subsumption architecture. One could argue that Agile processes emerge architectures by building the simplest possible thing and evolving into more...