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SCRUM

 

-Description of Scrum

Scrum is an iterative and incremental agile software development framework for managing product development.[1][2] It defines "a flexible, holistic product development strategy where a development team works as a unit to reach a common goal",[3] challenges assumptions of the "traditional, sequential approach"[3] to product development, and enables teams to self-organize by encouraging physical co-location or close online collaboration of all team members, as well as daily face-to-face communication among all team members and disciplines involved.

A key principle of Scrum is its recognition that during product development, the customers can change their minds about what they want and need (often called requirements volatility[4]), and that unpredicted challenges cannot be easily addressed in a traditional predictive or planned manner. As such, Scrum adopts an evidence-based empirical approach—accepting that the problem cannot be fully understood or defined, focusing instead on maximizing the team's ability to deliver quickly, to respond to emerging requirements and to adapt to evolving technologies and changes in market conditions.

How we used scrum :

- A product owner creates a prioritized wish list called a product backlog.

- During sprint planning, the team pulls a small chunk from the top of that wish list, a sprint backlog, and decides how to implement those pieces.

- The team has a certain amount of time — a sprint — to complete its work

- The sprint ends with a sprint review and retrospective.

- As the next sprint begins, the team chooses another chunk of the product backlog and begins working again.

 

How it affected the creation of the site:

With scrum methodology, we can determine the priority of each task.

After each sprint with the team retrospective, we know what we lack, what should we improve & what's already good.

We believe that every sprint, our performance will become better.

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