Aug 5, 2022
This week, Dan Neumann is joined
by Jim Beale and
Gerardo de la Fuente
to follow up on a conversation
started in a previous episode where the constitution of a
high-performing team was addressed and its direct relation with
following the Scrum Values.
In this episode, Jim, Gerardo,
and Dan explore the importance of trust, and how it can only be
encouraged by the presence and exercise of the Scrum Values in a
Team.
Key Takeaways
- What does the Scrum Guide say about
trust?
-
- Trust is just an outcome of living the Scrum
Values that are reflected on the Team.
- When someone starts working with a Team, it
starts as a stranger, and what helps build that trust is not only
sharing the Scrum Values but also being an example by practicing
them.
- How can a Scrum Master help to build trust in a
Team?
-
- Have one-to-one sessions with each Team member,
holding an open conversation about themselves and how they feel
about the work.
- Building trust requires time and
consistency.
- A Scrum Master must be honest in admitting when
he had failed to follow the Scrum Values.
- How to overcome the first dysfunction of a
Team?
-
- Absence of trust is the first dysfunction to
address, none of the other four (inattention to results, avoidance
of accountability, lack of commitment, fear of conflict) can be
managed until trust is recovered.
- Examples of the absence of trust:
-
- A Team member avoids sharing an issue as a
consequence of fearing being judged.
- When there isn’t trust, a lot of personal
conflict arises in Team meetings.
- Backchannel conversations appear often as a
result of a lack of trust.
- People take feedback in a personal
way.
- Other tactics to encourage trust-building in a
Team:
-
- Motivate people to be open and to make
questions.
- A Scrum Master needs to be willing to share
that he does not know everything.
- Avoid asking people why did they do something,
which tends to create defensiveness, and instead be curious about
what they found interesting in the decision they made.
- Ice breakers help build trust.
- Share the prime directive in the
retrospectives.
- Assume everyone is doing their best possible in
the situation at hand, this is a way to avoid being
judgmental.
- What is celebrated is repeated, so taking the
time to highlight when Scrum Values are practiced is a good way of
promoting them even more.
- Opening the cameras when meeting
virtually.
Mentioned in this Episode:
Listen to
“What Does a High-Performing Scrum
Team Look Like?” with
Erica Menendez and Justin Thatil
Overcoming the Five
Dysfunctions of a Team, by Patrick Lencioni
Coaching Agile Teams: A
Companion for ScrumMasters, Agile Coaches, and Project Managers in
Transition, by Lisa
Adkins
Fixing Your Scrum: Practical
Solutions to Common Scrum Problems, by Ryan Ripley
Scrum Mastery: Agile Leadership
to Take Your Team’s Performance From Good to
Great, by Jeff Cohn
Want to Learn More or Get in Touch?
Visit the website and catch up
with all the episodes on AgileThought.com!
Email your thoughts or
suggestions to Podcast@AgileThought.com
or Tweet @AgileThought using
#AgileThoughtPodcast!