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4 Ways to Coach with the Scrum Values

Published November 13, 2017
by Stephanie Ockerman

Scrum is a framework that thrives on self-managing teams.  It gives you boundaries (e.g. timebox of a Sprint), clear accountabilities (e.g. Product Owner optimizes value), and goals (e.g. Done Increment).  But it doesn’t tell you exactly how to do the work.  Every Scrum Team needs to figure out the strategy and tactics that work for their context in this moment.

But the Scrum Guide does give us the secret to maximizing the benefits of Scrum — the Scrum values.

We can use the Scrum values as a compass.

The Scrum values help guide us in how we are working as a collaborative team and how we are enabling the benefits of empiricism.

Note:  If you want to learn more about the Scrum values and read examples of how to use them in Scrum, check out these blog posts: Focus, Openness, Courage, Commitment, Respect.

As a Scrum Master, you demonstrate servant leadership by coaching with the Scrum values.

4 Ways to Coach with the Scrum Values

coach-with-the-scrum-values
Photo by Climate KIC on Unsplash

1. Establish what the Scrum values mean to us as individuals and as a team.

As human beings, we all have core values.  Living our values help us feel in alignment and helps us show up as our most authentic selves.  When we talk about teams having values, this doesn’t just magically happen.  Teams need to form an identity in order to be effective.  One piece of identity is understanding values.

Team members need to work through what their values actually mean to them because individuals each have different interpretations of values, and different teams will have different interpretations of values.

Here are a few questions to use with individuals or teams to coach with the Scrum values:

  • What is important about [Scrum value]?
  • What does it look like to honor [Scrum value] in our daily work?
  • What does it look like to ignore [Scrum value] in our daily work?
  • How does it feel to be in alignment with [Scrum value]?

If we discover conflicts between individual values and the Scrum values, we need to explore that further.  Negotiation may be necessary to enable teams to be effective and individuals to feel in alignment with what matters to them.

2. Use the Scrum values to help guide decision-making.

Once teams have established what the Scrum values mean to them, the values can be used as a tool to help guide decision-making.  Scrum Masters can recognize when Scrum Teams or individual team members may feel stuck when facing a challenging decision.  It could be about what to build, how to build something, processes, tools, relationships and interactions… anything.

Here are examples of questions to help you coach with the Scrum values:

  • What would [Scrum value] tell us about this decision?
  • Which Scrum value feels most important for this decision?

3. Observe and discuss outcomes and behaviors and refine what the Scrum values mean to us.

The Scrum values discussion is not a one-time thing.  We will continuously encounter new situations that require more discovery of how we interpret and use the Scrum values.  We will also fail to honor our team commitments regarding the Scrum values because, you know, we are human.  So we need to be inspecting and adapting on how we are living the Scrum values.  Sprint Retrospectives are a great opportunity for this.

Here are some reflective questions to coach with the Scrum values:

  • How did we honor [Scrum value] this Sprint?
  • Which Scrum values helped us achieve [outcome]?
  • Which values do we want to honor more?
  • What will be possible when we honor this value?
  • In what situations does it feel most difficult to honor [Scrum value]?

4. Identify actions for improvement.

A key part of coaching is moving to commitment and accountability.  This is what helps individuals and teams grow – taking action after we have enough learning and discovery.

Here are examples of commitment-focused coaching questions to use when coaching individuals and teams:

  • When we/ you honor [Scrum value], what are we saying yes to?
  • When we/you honor [Scrum value], what are we saying no to?
  • Who do[we/ you need to be in order to do [actionable commitment]?

Remember, the Scrum Master does not own all of the actions for improvement.  The individuals and the team own their coaching commitments.  (Read:  Stop Being So Helpful)

Want more coaching tips?  Check out 6 Coaching Tips for Scrum Masters.

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