Of all the “agile” practices, Retrospectives are the only one I advise ALL teams should be doing regularly. Why? It’s the most effective way to figure out what works best for your team and to ensure you’re continually evolving and improving the way you work.
I love them so much I built the Agile Retrospective Wiki! Still going strong with thousands of visitors from across the globe every week 😊 (link in the comments 👇)
However, too often, retros aren’t much more than “improvement theatre” Chris Parsons (edit) – transactional, energy draining and nothing changes as a result of them.
Anyway, here’s my guide 👀
📚 Facilitation is a skill
Ensuring meetings are not being driven by whoever shouts the loudest, or ending up as a long ineffectual debate takes thought and practice.
Facilitation is an art. The first three chapters of Derby and Larson’s book, “Agile Retrospectives: Making Good Teams Great,” is a must read IMO.
🔄 Rotate the facilitator
It’s common to be one person’s role to lead retros. This is the best way to make sure they stagnate! It prevents teams from feeling engaged and empowered to solve their own problems, and risks bias to one persons’ agenda. Whilst it may be one role’s job to make sure they happen, that doesn’t mean they have to run them all.
Get everyone to take turns facilitating.
✅ Achievable actions, clear ownership and tracking
Common failings 😥
– Not taking any actions
– Taking on too many actions
– Actions that are too big or vague
– Not following up on actions
Do this instead 😃
– Make actions small and precise (see SMART)
– Ensure actions have owners
– Track the actions just like any other work (e.g. on your work tracking tool).
– At the start of the next retrospective, review outstanding actions
🖖 Embrace “The Prime Directive”
You don’t have to remind people at the start of every retro, but this has to be front of mind, to set the right tone:
“Regardless of what we discover, we understand and truly believe that everyone did the best job they could, given what they knew at the time, their skills and abilities, the resources available, and the situation at hand.”
–Norm Kerth, Project Retrospectives: A Handbook for Team Review
🎲 Mix it up! Try different retrospective plans
Doing the “Start, stop, continue” retro every time? 🥱 Try something different! The Agile Retrospective Wiki is full of different plans you can try (other sources are available!)
How to run effective Retrospectives
Leave a reply