Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Scrum
    /skrəm/

    noun

    • 1. an ordered formation of players, used to restart play, in which the forwards of a team form up with arms interlocked and heads down, and push forward against a similar group from the opposing side. The ball is thrown into the scrum and the players try to gain possession of it by kicking it backward toward their own side.
    • 2. a disorderly crowd of people or things: British "there was quite a scrum of people at the bar"

    verb

    • 1. form or take part in a scrum: "the two men scrummed down together for University College, Dublin"
  2. www.scrum.org › learning-series › what-is-scrumWhat is Scrum? | Scrum.org

    Scrum is an empirical process, where decisions are based on observation, experience and experimentation. Scrum has three pillars: transparency, inspection and adaptation. This supports the concept of working iteratively.

  3. Scrum is a lightweight yet incredibly powerful framework. Scrum relies on cross-functional and self-managing teams to deliver products and services in short cycles, enabling: Fast feedback; Quicker innovation; Continuous improvement; Rapid adaptation to change; Delighted customers; Reduced time from idea to delivery

  4. Scrum is an agile project management framework that helps teams structure and manage their work through a set of values, principles, and practices.

  5. Learn about scrum, the most used agile framework. Get an overview of what scrum is, how Scrum and other agile project management approaches look at complex work, and how the roles, events, and artifacts work together for success.

  6. Scrum is an agile team collaboration framework commonly used in software development and other industries. Scrum prescribes for teams to break work into goals to be completed within time-boxed iterations, called sprints. Each sprint is no longer than one month and commonly lasts two weeks.

  7. Scrum is a process framework used to manage product development and other knowledge work. Scrum is empirical in that it provides a means for teams to establish a hypothesis of how they think something works, try it out, reflect on the experience, and make the appropriate adjustments.

  8. scrumguides.org › docs › scrumguideThe Scrum Guide

    Scrum is a lightweight framework that helps people, teams and organizations generate value through adaptive solutions for complex problems. In a nutshell, Scrum requires a Scrum Master to foster an environment where: A Product Owner orders the work for a complex problem into a Product Backlog.

  1. People also search for