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Creating a Definition of Done: A SoundNotes Tutorial

Creating a Definition of Done: A SoundNotes Tutorial

FromLeadingAgile SoundNotes: an Agile Podcast


Creating a Definition of Done: A SoundNotes Tutorial

FromLeadingAgile SoundNotes: an Agile Podcast

ratings:
Length:
9 minutes
Released:
Nov 1, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

One of the most important things you can do for your team is to make sure you have a clearly defined, and well-documented, Definition of Done.
If you’ve ever seen footage of the flight control center when NASA launches a rocket you’ve seen a great example of a Definition of Done. Imagine what it would be like if NASA didn’t have all those stations that had to report in with “Go for launch” or “No Go for launch”. Imagine how that would work if we assumed we all had the same understanding of what "Ready for Launch" actually meant?
In this episode of SoundNotes, Dave Prior is giving a tutorial on how to create a Definition of Done for your team. If you're following Scrum as it's defined, then “done” and potentially shippable are intended to be the same thing. Unfortunately, for many organizations, this isn't something that holds true. For example, your team may require additional integration testing that is done by a separate team and happens outside the Sprint. Yes, it’s dysfunctional from a Scrum perspective. Yes, you should try to fix it, but sometimes you’ve got what you’ve got and you're too fully consumed with other battles.
Over the course of the podcast, Dave talks about having clarity on three different levels of done. Here's what the three levels look like:
Work that is “done” and can be presented to the Product Owner for Acceptance - this is an agreement between the PO and the Dev Team.
Example:
Code Complete
Test Cases are automated and executed
No defects
Acceptance Criteria Met
Pass Unit Testing
Pass Code Review
Documentation Complete as defined in Acceptance Criteria
Team knows how they will present feature during Sprint Review
 
2. Work that is “done” and can be presented to Stakeholders in the Sprint Review
Example:
Work has been presented to Product Owner
Product Owner Accepts as Potentially Shippable
Passes Previous Acceptance Tests
Demo Ready for Sprint Review
No Compile Warnings
Bugs Committed in Sprint Resolved
Deployment Docs Updated
Release Notes Updated
3. Work that is “done” and can be actually shipped to customers.
Example:
Published to Stage Server
Passes Deployment Testing
Deployment Docs Delivered
Release Notes Delivered
Infrastructure Change Notes Delivered
Passes Performance Testing
Passes Security Audio
If you don’t have a clearly defined, well-documented Definition of Done that you're updating every Sprint, you're putting your team and your organization in danger. If you don't already have a Definition of Done, you need one...and you need it now! In this episode of SoundNotes, Dave walks you through the creation of a Definition of Done.
Contacting Dave Prior
If you’d like to contact Dave you can reach him at:
LeadingAgile: https://www.leadingagile.com/guides/dave-prior/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mrsungo
Twitter: https://twitter.com/mrsungo
Email: dave.prior@leadingagile.com
If you have a question you’d like to submit for an upcoming podcast, please send them to dave.prior@leadingagile.com
And if you're interested in taking one of our upcoming Certified ScrumMaster or Certified Scrum Product Owner classes, you can find all the details at https://www.leadingagile.com/our-gear/training/
Released:
Nov 1, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

LeadingAgile's resident Scrum trainer Dave Prior, hosts a weekly podcast that covers all sorts of topics about Agile, Scrum, Organizational Transformation and Leadership. No matter if you're new to Agile development or an Agile veteran, Dave and his guest are sure to make you think about Agile in a whole new way! Alexa knows us as Leading Agile Sound Notes.