Empirical Process Control: Delivering Value Fast with Scrum
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As you can see from the Scrum Principles below, Empirical Process Control is right up there with Iterative Development
Click the button at the bottom of this blog to see Iterative Development in action.
Scrum isn't about rigid plansβit's about learning, adapting, and delivering real value continuously. This is the essence of empirical process control: making decisions based on observation, experimentation, and feedback.
What is Empirical Process Control
The three essential parts of Empirical Process Control are discussed below.
1. Transparency
Transparency makes everything visible, fostering trust and effective decision-making:
- Artifacts: Vision Statement, Prioritized Product Backlog, Release Plans
- Meetings: Daily Standups, Sprint Reviews
- Information Radiators: Scrumboards, Burndown Charts
2. Inspection
Inspection allows early detection of issues and ensures quality:
- Monitoring progress via Scrumboards and metrics
- Gathering feedback from customers and stakeholders
- Reviewing deliverables during Demonstrate & Validate Sprints
3. Adaptation
Adaptation ensures continuous improvement based on insights:
- Daily Standups and risk identification
- Backlog refinement and change requests
- Retrospectives at sprint and project levels
Iteration & Incrementation
Scrum emphasizes short iterations (sprints) and incremental delivery, allowing teams to release the minimum viable product (MVP) quickly:
- Deliver a working solution to users as soon as possible
- Collect real feedback to guide improvements
- Focus on high-value features first, add enhancements later
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