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You're reading from  The Professional Scrum Master Guide

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Published inJul 2021
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781800205567
Edition1st Edition
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Fred Heath
Fred Heath
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Fred Heath

Fred Heath is a freelance developer and consultant based in Wales, UK. Over the last 20 years, he's worked at every stage of the software development life cycle using a variety of languages and platforms and ended up falling in love with Ruby and its ecosystem. Fred enjoys solving tricky problems, FOSS, meta programming, Behavior-Driven Development, and Agile processes. He also frequently writes online and speaks at conferences about Ruby, software development, and best practices. Fred is always happy to hear from you and chat about Ruby and Rails on Twitter.
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The pillars of empiricism

Just like a house needs pillars in order to be supported and withstand bad weather or earthquakes, so does a development framework need pillars to support it and make it resistant to adverse effects. For an empirical approach, such as Scrum, these pillars are Inspection, Adaptation, and Transparency.

The pillars of empiricism are summarized in the following diagram:

Figure 2.1 – The pillars of empiricism

Let's examine what each of these pillars means.

Inspection

As mentioned in Chapter 1, Introduction to Scrum, Scrum Teams produce certain artifacts. According to the Scrum Guide, Scrum practitioners should inspect Scrum Artifacts when these are being produced. Inspections should be honest and thorough, but they should not take over or obstruct the development work.

We have actually already mentioned one of these artifacts: the Increment. Increments, as well as the other artifacts that we'll examine in...

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The Professional Scrum Master Guide
Published in: Jul 2021Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781800205567

Author (1)

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Fred Heath

Fred Heath is a freelance developer and consultant based in Wales, UK. Over the last 20 years, he's worked at every stage of the software development life cycle using a variety of languages and platforms and ended up falling in love with Ruby and its ecosystem. Fred enjoys solving tricky problems, FOSS, meta programming, Behavior-Driven Development, and Agile processes. He also frequently writes online and speaks at conferences about Ruby, software development, and best practices. Fred is always happy to hear from you and chat about Ruby and Rails on Twitter.
Read more about Fred Heath