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You're reading from  The Professional Scrum Master Guide

Product typeBook
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.
Read more about Fred Heath

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Summary

In this chapter, we learned what the Scrum Events are, when they take place, how long they last, who attends them, and what their purpose is. We understood how to prepare for the Sprint and how to plan for it in the Sprint Planning. We saw how the Daily Scrum helps us focus on completing the work we committed to in the Sprint. We realized how the Sprint Review and the Sprint Retrospective provide opportunities to learn, adapt, and improve our product, process, and team.

The Scrum Events provide practical and regular support for the pillars of Scrum (transparency, inspection, and adaptation). As such, they must be observed and understood by the Scrum Team. Skipping out on or omitting events undermines the foundations of the Scrum framework. It is the job of the Scrum Master to ensure this doesn't happen.

The Scrum Events will be even better understood when we put them in the context of the Scrum Artifacts, which we will do in the following chapter, so stay tuned...

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

Author (1)

author image
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