Scrum Artifacts
Scrum artifacts represent the work of the Scrum Team or the value delivered toward the end goal. These are the artifacts that enable transparency for the entire Scrum Team.
There are three Scrum artifacts, each of which should be defined and measured as follows:
Product (or task) backlog : the complete list of work to be completed, measured against the product goal,
Sprint Backlog : The list of work to be completed during a sprint, measured against the sprint goal,
Increment : The deliverable(s) provided for review at the end of a sprint, measured by the Definition of Done (DoD) concept. In other words, deliverables are measured by verifying that all tasks have reached the status of "Done."
As we've seen, Scrum project management consists of several ceremonies rcs data portugal repeated until a project is completed. However, Scrum ceremonies can also be divided into five stages:
Scrum Step 1: Pre-planning
Defining goals and vision: The product owner defines the overall goals and often a roadmap for the product. This is usually done in direct collaboration with stakeholders.
Creating and optimizing the product backlog: The product backlog is a list of features, criteria, and bug fixes (for active software) that describes everything a team needs to do to complete a product.
The Five Steps of Scrum Project Management
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