2. Aram - user story-sprint planning

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Confidential 06/06/2022 1 AGILE TOUR YEREVAN 04, October, 2014 User Story, Sprint Planning Aram Kalantaryan Product Owner, VMware

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Agile Tour by Macadamian - 04 Oct 2014

Transcript of 2. Aram - user story-sprint planning

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Confidential 04/08/2023 1

AGILE TOUR YEREVAN04, October, 2014

User Story, Sprint Planning

Aram KalantaryanProduct Owner, VMware

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Agenda

8 tips for writing great User Stories

Sprint Planning

Q&A

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User Story

User stories are short, simple description of a feature told from the perspective of the person who desires the new capability, usually a user or customer of the system

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1. Start with the Users

As a <type of user>, I want <some goal> so that <some reason>.

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2. Use Personas to Discover the Right Stories

What functionality does the product have to provide to meet the goal of the personas?

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3. Write Stories Collaboratively

A user story is not a specification, but a communication and collaboration tool.

The product owner and the team should discuss the stories, or even better, write them together

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4. Keep your Stories Simple and Concise

Write your stories so that they are easy to understand, avoid confusing and ambiguous terms

Experiment with different ways to write your stories to understand what works best for you and your team

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5. Start with Epics

Starting with epics allows you to sketch the product functionality without committing to the details

This is particularly helpful for new products and new features

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6. Decompose your Stories until they are Ready

Break your epics into smaller, detailed stories until they are ready: clear, feasible, and testable

the story should not too big, and there has to be an effective way to determine if the story is done

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7. Add Acceptance Criteria

The criteria enrich the story and make it more precise and testable

As a rule of thumb, use three to five criteria for detailed stories

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8. Keep your Stories Visible and Accessible

Make Stories visible by putting them up on the wall or by using collaboration tools

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Agile Planning

There are two defined artifacts that result from a sprint planning meeting:o A sprint backlogo A sprint goal

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THANK YOU!