Yesterday my wife asked me to dig a hole in the garden so she could plant a rose bush. No sooner had I grabbed the spade than my 16-month-old son came over to help.
A few minutes, and a scraped knee later, we had successfully dug a hole.
This got me thinking.
A task that normally would have taken me about a minute, tops, took about 3 minutes. And I probably exerted double the effort, since rather than just moving some soil, my concern was moving soil slowly and deliberately in a way that gave my son a sense of participation. And my son exerted significant effort of his own.
As Iβve been thinking about story points lately, I saw a parallel.
Had I estimated the hole-digging task before hand, perhaps I would have assigned it a value of 1 story point.
But with my son involved, how does that affect my estimate? Letβs consider three options:
- 1 Story Point Itβs the same task, whether I do it alone, or with the help of a trainee
- 3 Story Points By involving a trainee, we can expect the task to take 3x longer
- 8 Story Points To reflect the aggregate effort and increased complexity that comes from involving a trainee
I find this an interesting thought experiment, because whatever answer I come up with, I can see it conflicting with common advice about story points. If I say 1 story point, because the task is the same, then Iβm admitting that story points donβt really reflect effort or complexityβa trope we hear constantly.
If I say 3 story points, then Iβm essentially saying that story points are just translated to time. While this makes a certain sense, especially when trying to estimate for the sake of business schedules, it also violates the common trope that βstory points do not equate to time!β
So 8 story points it is, right? But this makes our estimates entirely subjective, depending entirely on who is doing the work. It also makes comparison of story points (whether over time, which is often an anti-pattern anyway), or just relative estimation much harder, because like stories wonβt have like story point values.
What do you think? Iβm running a poll on LinkedIn, and your feedback is welcome!
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