There's quite a lot of techniques to do it, but a few that tend to be pretty easy to get started with are:
Sprint Goals
Product Vision
Impact Maps
Sprint Goals are pretty simply a few statements about what the REAL purpose of a sprint is. Too many teams are trapped in just delivering scope, so when we are clear about WHY, now teams can actually come up with options and adjust.
Product vision is pretty well beat to death in every book on agile development, but it get skipped a bit, or is left behind in some powerpoint deck. The idea is to come up with a compelling vision or mission that represents the product and continually bring it up in conversations about upcoming work. Continually reorient back towards it.
Impact mapping is one of my more favored scoping techniques and it starts with a vision, then goals, then gets to scope. That means everything we do is directly tied to a measurable goal that moves us to a vision. This means conversations about what we're doing and why are fluid and we don't wind up debating a lot of pet features.
There're more ways to do this like discovery workshops and the like, but those are typically not close to development activities.
There's quite a lot of techniques to do it, but a few that tend to be pretty easy to get started with are:
Sprint Goals are pretty simply a few statements about what the REAL purpose of a sprint is. Too many teams are trapped in just delivering scope, so when we are clear about WHY, now teams can actually come up with options and adjust.
Product vision is pretty well beat to death in every book on agile development, but it get skipped a bit, or is left behind in some powerpoint deck. The idea is to come up with a compelling vision or mission that represents the product and continually bring it up in conversations about upcoming work. Continually reorient back towards it.
Impact mapping is one of my more favored scoping techniques and it starts with a vision, then goals, then gets to scope. That means everything we do is directly tied to a measurable goal that moves us to a vision. This means conversations about what we're doing and why are fluid and we don't wind up debating a lot of pet features.
There're more ways to do this like discovery workshops and the like, but those are typically not close to development activities.
"continually bring it up in conversations about upcoming work. Continually reorient back towards it." - Love it