Scrum projects, especially in the early Sprints, reveal
hidden problems and issues within the Scrum team. Imagine a Scrum Master on her
first Scrum project just days after obtaining her Scrum Master Certification.
All team members seem to be interested in her words of advice and are attending
all the meetings she asks them to. One of the retrospective meetingsappears to
be running effortlessly when unexpectedly a senior developer complains
abouttest engineers who would not trust the rest of the team members to provide
adequate testing. He claims thatmore than two thirds of the User stories are
therefore in the final stages of testing .The Test engineersretort that no one other
than them is qualified to do proper testing and complain that Scrum ignores
testing. Our Scrum Master sees this as a technical issue: testing needs to be
automated to reduce the workload of testers. She even organizes the Scrum
training adapted specifically for test engineers. As a result, the Scrum team
seems to buy ininto cross-functional teams and the need of automation.
Though the surface problemmay have been solved, the actual
issue is lack of trust. What her Scrum master training has not taught her is
that when test engineers do not trust the rest of the team; maybethe reverse is
also true. Team members are not honest and are afraid to talk about their
mistakes and weaknesses. Consequently, the team engages in closed debates and resorts
to indirect deliberations and shielded remarks. Eventually the problems bubble
out of control, causing far bigger issues.In most organizations, before Scrum
implementation,teams usually appear to be working smoothly while hiding their
true anxieties from each other. A team that does not debateandengage in healthy
conflict also lacks commitment. Since
team members are not expressing their views in open dialogue, they seldom
commit to a resolution, although they may show agreement. Unfortunately, it startsa
bigger problem: evasion of accountability. This allows the bullies to bulldoze
their way through and leads to dissent and team members become more interested
in their own results than in the project. When team members are uncommitted toand
uninvolved in a well understood roadmap, they fail to confrontfellow team
members on activities and behaviors that are counterproductive to the project.
Before confronting team members and their lack of Trust, a
Scrum master has to first ask self: AmI willing to be vulnerable?Lack of trust
is usually caused by reluctance to be weak. When Scrum Masters fight the urge
to constantly advertise how awesome they are and behave honestly, the team sees
a leader they can relate to. Then Scrum Master can talk to the members and they
will listen as a wholeteam. Next, a Scrum master can try group exercises where
everyone shares details they otherwise would not. E.g.what
was your worstmoment in high-school? Scrum masters can also try to get the team
together outside the normal work environment for this exercise.They should setobjectives
for the wholeteam and verify every team member is driven to achieve these objectives.
There can bebehavioralgoals and individual objectives aligned with those team objectives.
Making some of these changes may be a battle; Scrum masters may have to enlist senior
management support to win. It’s the best way to avoid Trust deficit and the
resulting breakdown in behavior.
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