Impact-Driven Scrum Delivery at Scrum gathering Phoenix 2015
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Transcript of Impact-Driven Scrum Delivery at Scrum gathering Phoenix 2015
IMPACT DRIVEN SCRUM DELIVERY
HOW TO DELIVER DESIRABLE PRODUCTS
#impactmapping #impactmanagement #UX @ingriddomingues @HeedTheNeed
INGRID DOMINGUES
@ingriddomingues
STOCKHOLM GÖTEBORG MALMÖ
SARA LERÉN
@HeedTheNeed
WHAT IS THIS ”IMPACT DRIVEN DELIVERY”
THING
HOW CAN IT HELP YOU?
AND
IMPACT
MAPPING MAP
MANAGEMENT Framework
Task
Model
IMPACT
MAPPING MAP
MANAGEMENT Framework
Task
Model
IMPACT MAP
IMPACT MAP EFFEKTKARTA ®
WHY
IMPACT MAP EFFEKTKARTA ®
WHY
HOW
IMPACT MAP EFFEKTKARTA ®
WHY
HOW
WHAT
IMPACT MAP EFFEKTKARTA ®
WHY IMPACT ON BUSINESS
HOW IMPACT ON USE
WHAT SOLUTION
WHY IMPACT ON BUSINESS
HOW IMPACT ON USE
WHAT SOLUTION
AIM or SLOGAN
DOMAIN and its METRICS
USER BEHAVIOURS
NEEDS
CAPABILITY
FUNCTIONS
WHY IMPACT ON BUSINESS
HOW IMPACT ON USE
WHAT SOLUTION
AIM or SLOGAN
DOMAIN and its METRICS
USER BEHAVIOURS
NEEDS
CAPABILITY and its
FUNCTIONS
SCOPING
MEASURING LONG-TERM SUCCESS
PRIORITIZING
TESTING DESIGN
EVALUATING SOLUTIONS and GENERATING SUGGESTIONS
GROUND FOR SPECIFICATION
A few defined rules and structures makes the Impact Map a solid ground for design, planning and quality assurance, thus delivering desired value:
1. The WHY must consist of at least two actionable metrics with a timeframe
2. The HOW must be based on user studies, even if rudimentary
3. The HOW must be prioritized, based on impact on the WHY
4. Every point in the chain from WHY to WHAT should add a clear value
#impactmap describe metrics
for desired outcome
WHY IMPACT ON BUSINESS
HOW IMPACT ON USE
WHAT SOLUTION
AIM or SLOGAN
DOMAIN and its METRICS
USER and her
NEEDS
CAPABILITY and its
FUNCTIONS
SCOPING
MEASURING LONG-TERM SUCCESS
PRIORITIZING
TESTING DESIGN
EVALUATING SOLUTIONS and GENERATING SUGGESTIONS
GROUND FOR SPECIFICATION
START WITH DOMAINS
• Productivity
• Effectiveness
• Learning
• Customer satisfaction
• Recurrent customers
• Conversion
• Correctness
• Brand awareness
• Recommendation
• Learnability
• …
CONTINUE WITH METRICS
Something that people think, feel or do when (or after) using the product
= there must be a causality
SOME EXAMPLES ON METRICS
LEARNING
20% of visitors should move between 2 or more content types (learning, treatment, knowledge…)
80% of visitors shold consider that they have reached a much greater understanding on ….
GENERATE LEADS
5% of visitors to pages with ”contact me” button should fill in the form
OBJECTIVE METRICS
QUANTITATIVE METHODS
QUALITATIVE METHODS
SUBJECTIVE METRICS
OBSERVED BEHAVIOUR Log analytics, user testing & field studies • Visitor behaviour • Success rate
ANALYSED OPINIONS User testing, in-depth interviews, focus groups • Attitudes • Explained behaviour
MEASUREMENTS Log analytics, absolute measurements
• No. of mistakes • Conversion rate
• No. of returning customers • Task time
MEASURED OPINIONS Surveys
• Attitudes
• Satisfaction • Estimated time spent
• Estimated quality
MEANINGFUL AIMS/SLOGANS
• Consists of one sentence
• Summarises the metrics
• Describes the value that the solution brings to the business
EXERCISE 1 Metrics
EXERCISE 1 - METRICS
● Write metrics. 10 min.
● Read the aim and the domains
● Think about how to measure success
● Write at least one metric for each domain
● Presentation and discussion
Tip: Think about quantitative vs. qualitative methods, subjective vs. objective metrics.
WHY IMPACT ON BUSINESS
HOW IMPACT ON USE
WHAT SOLUTION
AIM or SLOGAN
DOMAIN and its METRICS
USER and her
NEEDS
CAPABILITY and its
FUNCTIONS
SCOPING
MEASURING LONG-TERM SUCCESS
PRIORITIZING
TESTING DESIGN
EVALUATING SOLUTIONS and GENERATING SUGGESTIONS
GROUND FOR SPECIFICATION
The Eager
The Focused
Spends time thinking about interior decoration and smart solutions for their own home, or even other peoples homes. Collecting smart and beatutiful solutions for now or the future, and likes to share their ideas with others.
NEEDS • Wants to be inspired about new design and renovations • Wants to daydream
The Dreamer ”This could be very nice when...”
PRIORITISE
• Will give guidance for the project:
– Release plan
– Design
– Cuttings
• Defined by business managers. Based on:
– Number of users
– Activity
– Impact on others
NEEDS
• A sentence that starts with either
– WANTS – close at heart
– MUST – resistance
• The sentence should give guidance for validating designs e.g ”wants to easily check what she has paid for”
MEANINGFUL NEEDS
• Describes why the product or service is used
• Shall make it possible to know what is needed to satisfy the user
• Avoid talking about functions, keep asking ”Why?” until you get to the real need
EXERCISE 2 Users
EXERCISE 2 - USERS
● Name the users. 10 min.
● Read the user descriptions
● What sets them apart from each other?
● Come up with a name for each user that summarizes the description
● Presentation and discussion
Tip: Think about usage patterns, not demographics. E.g. ”The Busy Bee” instead of ”Female, age 37.”
IMPACT
MAPPING MAP
MANAGEMENT Framework
Task
Model
• Aim for sustainability
• Design for behaviours
• Test in use
• Decide on outcome
Ability to make investment decisions
Ability to make investment decisions
HIGH
LOW
Consequences of fail
Consequences of fail
SEVERE LIMITED
Ability to make investment decisions
HIGH
LOW
Consequences of fail
SEVERE LIMITED
http://www.infoq.com/articles/most-impact-mapping
Evaluate hypothezis
User Stories with UX acceptance criterias
Validate that design meets user needs
Validate that long-term metrics are met
EVALUATE SUCCESS – Early and continuously
#impactmanagement makes it possible to validate ideas and deliveries along the
way
EXERCISE 3 Design evaluation
WHY IMPACT ON BUSINESS
HOW IMPACT ON USE
WHAT SOLUTION
AIM or SLOGAN
DOMAIN and its METRICS
USER and her
NEEDS
CAPABILITY and its
FUNCTIONS
SCOPING
MEASURING LONG-TERM SUCCESS
PRIORITIZING
TESTING DESIGN
EVALUATING SOLUTIONS and GENERATING SUGGESTIONS
GROUND FOR SPECIFICATION
EXERCISE 3 - EVALUATION
● Pick a design. 10 min.
● Study the impact map
● Study the two different designs
● Based on the impact map, decide which design is best
● Presentation and discussion
Tip: Which design can best help create the desired impact? Which design will satisfy the needs of the highest prioritised user?
PRODUCT STRATEGY
Product Owner
UX Lead
- Buliding the right thing
- Thinking far ahead
DELIVERY
Scrum Master
Team
- Building in the right way
- Producing executable code
Some AMENDMENTS to Scrum in order to be IMPACT DRIVEN
• The Product Owner has clear priorities, based on expected user and business impact
• UX Lead answers to all User Interface design related questions and is always available for the team
• The Backlog is a transition of the Impact Map
Some AMENDMENTS to Scrum in order to be IMPACT DRIVEN
• Backlog Refinement sessions are planned for by UX Lead, unclear issues are resolved as early as possible
• User Stories (with user interaction) contain design and UX acceptance criterias
• Definition of Done contains UX validation
• Deliveries are tested with users
Further reading
• Impact-Driven Scrum Delivery http://www.methodsandtools.com/archive/impactdrivenscrum.php
• Getting the most out of Impact Mapping http://www.infoq.com/articles/most-impact-mapping
THANK YOU!
inuseexperience.com
@HeedTheNeed @ingriddomingues
@inuse_swe