Over
the course of two days, the course will provide you a greater understanding
of the following :-
Scrum
Basics. What is Scrum and how has it evolved?
Scrum Theory. Why does Scrum work and what are
its core principles? How are the Scrum principles different from
those of more traditional software development approaches, and what
is the impact?
Scrum Framework and Meetings. How Scrum theory
is implemented using time-boxes, roles, rules, and artifacts. How
can these be used most effectively and how can they fall apart?
Scrum and Change. Scrum is different: what does
this mean to my project and my organization? How do I best adopt
Scrum given the change that is expected?
Scrum and Total Cost of Ownership. A system isn’t
just developed, it is also sustained, maintained and enhanced. How
is the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) of our systems or products
measured and optimized?
Scrum Teams. Scrum Teams are self-organizing and
cross-functional; this is different from traditional development
groups. How do we start with Scrum teams and how do we ensure their
success?
Scrum Planning. Plan a project and estimate its
cost and completion date.
Predictability, Risk Management, and Reporting.
Scrum is empirical. How can predictions be made, risk be controlled,
and progress be tracked using Scrum.
Scaling Scrum. Scrum works great with one team.
It also works better than anything else for projects or product
releases that involve hundreds or thousands of globally dispersed
team members. How is scaling best accomplished using Scrum?
source : scrum.org
|