Skip to main content

LUP Student Papers

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Challenges in Self-organizing within Scrum Teams: Theory Evaluation and Recommendations Based on Scrum Practitioners

Lyngfelt, Boman LU and Elhemaily, Ahmad (2019) MGTN59 20191
Department of Business Administration
Abstract
Being self-organizing is a core element of successful Scrum teams. Such teams require a high level of autonomy to perform, yet they operate within the context of an organization and its rules. Scrum teams should decide their work process, what to work on and how to deliver value for customers. The existing literature on Scrum teams investigates the challenges Scrum teams face in their daily life or the challenges teams face when transforming their work process from traditional product development (such as waterfall) to agile product development (such as Scrum). However, little is known about the challenges and impediments that directly relate to and threaten the self-organizing nature of Scrum teams. Through a mixed method approach... (More)
Being self-organizing is a core element of successful Scrum teams. Such teams require a high level of autonomy to perform, yet they operate within the context of an organization and its rules. Scrum teams should decide their work process, what to work on and how to deliver value for customers. The existing literature on Scrum teams investigates the challenges Scrum teams face in their daily life or the challenges teams face when transforming their work process from traditional product development (such as waterfall) to agile product development (such as Scrum). However, little is known about the challenges and impediments that directly relate to and threaten the self-organizing nature of Scrum teams. Through a mixed method approach inspired by grounded theory elements, this study compares the challenges acknowledged in the literature with the practical experience of Scrum practitioners. The study presents expert knowledge from 13 interviewed Scrum masters in various European countries as well as 65 questionnaire respondents (Scrum practitioners) from all around the world. The study then presents recommendations based on these practitioners’ expert views. The recommendations are aimed towards future Scrum teams to help them mitigate and possibly prevent challenges
that could possibly threaten their efforts towards being self-organizing. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Lyngfelt, Boman LU and Elhemaily, Ahmad
supervisor
organization
course
MGTN59 20191
year
type
H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
subject
keywords
Scrum, Self-organizing, agile, product management, software development
language
English
id
8990191
date added to LUP
2019-07-05 14:05:47
date last changed
2019-07-05 14:05:47
@misc{8990191,
  abstract     = {{Being self-organizing is a core element of successful Scrum teams. Such teams require a high level of autonomy to perform, yet they operate within the context of an organization and its rules. Scrum teams should decide their work process, what to work on and how to deliver value for customers. The existing literature on Scrum teams investigates the challenges Scrum teams face in their daily life or the challenges teams face when transforming their work process from traditional product development (such as waterfall) to agile product development (such as Scrum). However, little is known about the challenges and impediments that directly relate to and threaten the self-organizing nature of Scrum teams. Through a mixed method approach inspired by grounded theory elements, this study compares the challenges acknowledged in the literature with the practical experience of Scrum practitioners. The study presents expert knowledge from 13 interviewed Scrum masters in various European countries as well as 65 questionnaire respondents (Scrum practitioners) from all around the world. The study then presents recommendations based on these practitioners’ expert views. The recommendations are aimed towards future Scrum teams to help them mitigate and possibly prevent challenges
that could possibly threaten their efforts towards being self-organizing.}},
  author       = {{Lyngfelt, Boman and Elhemaily, Ahmad}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Challenges in Self-organizing within Scrum Teams: Theory Evaluation and Recommendations Based on Scrum Practitioners}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}