Project Managers who have done standups

by | 3.1 - AgileBI Team, Concepts, Done Done

As a Stakeholder or Product Owner
I want to understand what experience and skills a Project Manager needs
So that I know if they are suitable as a Scrum Master

Often you will get somebody join your team as a Scrum Master who has in a previous life been a Project Manager.  It seems to be the natural transition, to move from a being Project Manager to being a Scrum Master.

In my experience they often make the worse Scrum Masters.

I often see a Project Manager joining the Agile Team as a Scrum Master because they have “done standups” before.  Unfortunately, lots of organisations seem to think that running standups is all you need to do to be Agile.

In an AgileBI approach there are a number of ceremonies that need to happen in each sprint:

  • Daily standups
  • Sprint planning
  • Prove it session
  • Retrospective
  • Backlog grooming

Like all roles to be a good Scrum Master you actually need experience in running all these ceremonies.  Especially if you have a delivery team that is new to an Agile approach.  Taking the team successfully through these ceremonies for the first few times takes skill and experience.

A novice Scrum Masters natural reaction is to introduce all the complexities of these ceremonies to the team in the first go.  This approach tends to overwhelm the team, it is much better to gradually introduce the concepts of each ceremony as the Agile Team participates in them, effectively allowing them to learn by doing.

Another key skill a Scrum Master needs to have is to be able to facilitate the Agile Team so that they form and storm and become self organising.  A Project Manager acting as a Scrum Master will either “talk at” the team, running through the list of tasks inplay and maybe at the end doing a “round the table” to see if the team need to add anything.  Or they will structure the standup so that the Agile Team are “reporting” to the Scrum Master rather than talking to each other.

A classic fail “tell” is when the standup goes from being less than 15 minutes to becoming a 1 hour talk fest.

A Project Manager is used to creating the plan themselves and assigning tasks to team members, rather than helping a team to become self organising.  They are focussed on the success of the outcome not the success of the team.  Helping an Agile Team to become self organising is the primary goal of the Scrum Master.  Once the Agile Team is operating successfully, the outcomes pretty much take care of themselves.

Out of interest, in my experience I have found a Data or BI Analyst often makes the best Scrum Master, and as well as a Project Manager, a Business Analyst doesn’t.

If I can’t get an experienced Scrum Master for a new Agile Team, then I would much rather identify a capable person who is a permanent of the organisation, with the right aptitude, and find a great Agile Coach to help them upskill.

AgileBI Team Articles

The business model for BI is changing

Anybody who knows me knows that I am a big fan of Seth Godin. I find his logic enlightening, his insight well-reasoned, his writing innovative and when added together he is just cool! (Pity I didn't think of this way to see Seth cheap, like Victoria's friend) Seths...

SAS Visual Analytics Short Online Demo

Quick overview on SAS Visual Analytics from the SAS Software Youtube channel below. Excuse the number of times they say daaaattaaaa and the word Billion (and no thats not the price 😉 Interesting bits I picked up: It automatically picks the most suitable...

SAS Inno”VA”tion

SAS has been around for a long time and you have to admit it has been a very successful company announcing USD $2.8 billion in revenue lately, while remaining privately owned and focussed on delivering Analytics and related Business Intelligence software. But it's...

Google insight – is this the future of Analytics?

I found an interesting article here: http://www.buzzfeed.com/justinesharrock/a-glimpse-into-googles-brain-hidden-in-a-spreadsheet-app It outlines how if you open a google docs spreadsheet and create two cells of related text (say two different brand of beers) then...

Gartner (meta) BI Definitions – Definitions about Definitions

When reading the latest 2013 Gartner BI and Analytics Magic Quadrant I noticed that they have included some definitions of the various capabilities in each of the BI categories.  I wil no doubt end up cutting and pasting them into a few BI Strategy documents this...

Innovation Innovation where for art thou

I was sitting at the SUNZ conference last week listening to Evan Stubbs talk about Innovation and Analytics and how over the next 3-5 years there will be a marked shortage in Analytical bods, as the demand for these skills will far outweigh the supply. One of the examples of Innovation Evan gave was that old favourite […]

Meetings, Meetings, Meetings and not an outcome to drink

It would be fair to say that when working with customers defining or implementing BI strategies or architectures, I spend a bit of time in meetings with them. Meetings are always booked for at least an hour often two.  (as compared to workshops that are normally 1/2 a...

Apple Retail Stores are a competitive advantage, goes against conventional wisdom or does it?

Interesting article on how Apple are closing down 20 retail stores so they can move them to alternative locations that allow them to be bigger: http://techcrunch.com/2013/02/12/apple-closing-20-retail-stores-in-order-expand/ Interesting as of course the conventional wisdom for retailers for the last few years has been to from “bricks and mortar” to an eChannel strategy. However there has been a lot of noise around people […]