Your agile team is working on a website redesign project for a retail client. During the daily standup, one developer mentions she is blocked because she's waiting for design assets from the UI/UX designer, who is working on another high-priority task. The developer has been blocked for two days. The team has a sprint goal to complete three user stories by the end of the week. What should you do first as the Scrum Master?
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View all →You are leading an agile project to develop a mobile banking application. The team has just completed Sprint Planning and committed to delivering eight user stories in the upcoming two-week sprint. During the daily standup on day three, a developer mentions that one of the stories is taking much longer than estimated and may not be completed. What should you do first?
During a sprint retrospective for your software development project, team members identify that unclear user story acceptance criteria have caused significant rework in the past three sprints. The team estimates that 30% of their time has been spent redoing work that didn't meet unstated expectations. What should the team do to address this issue?
You are facilitating sprint planning for a three-week sprint. The product owner presents the prioritized backlog, and the team begins selecting user stories. After selecting six stories totaling 24 story points, three team members mention they have committed to attending a mandatory company training program that will take them away for three full days during the sprint. What should the team do?
