Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 68:50:33
  • Mais informações

Informações:

Sinopse

Every week day, Certified Scrum Master, Agile Coach and Business Consultant Vasco Duarte interviews Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches from all over the world to get you actionable advice, new tips and tricks, improve your craft as a Scrum Master with daily doses of inspiring conversations with Scrum Masters from the all over the world. Stay tuned for BONUS episodes when we interview Agile gurus and other thought leaders in the business space to bring you the Agile Business perspective you need to succeed as a Scrum Master. Some of the topics we discuss include: Agile Business, Agile Strategy, Retrospectives, Team motivation, Sprint Planning, Daily Scrum, Sprint Review, Backlog Refinement, Scaling Scrum, Lean Startup, Test Driven Development (TDD), Behavior Driven Development (BDD), Paper Prototyping, QA in Scrum, the role of agile managers, servant leadership, agile coaching, and more!

Episódios

  • Why Scrum Master Success Means Confronting the Ugly Truth With Data | Bhavin Shukla

    02/04/2026 Duração: 14min

    Bhavin Shukla: Why Scrum Master Success Means Confronting the Ugly Truth With Data Read the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.   "Success is not always good vibes, good environment for us as Scrum Masters. For me, it's about confronting the reality, the ugly truth, which takes the team to tougher conversations, more constructive challenges." - Bhavin Shukla   Bhavin shares a pivotal moment in his career that redefined what success means for a Scrum Master. He was working with a fantastic team — great culture, people who believed in quality, knowledge sharing, strong bonds. But sprint goals weren't being met, and stakeholders were constantly chasing the Product Owner and Scrum Master for answers. Bhavin got his hands dirty with the data: lack of clarity on work, context switching, patterns emerging. When he presented the data to the team, he was met with silence — a

  • De-Scaling an Agile Organization — Removing Bureaucracy Without Losing Consistency | Bhavin Shukla

    01/04/2026 Duração: 18min

    Bhavin Shukla: De-Scaling an Agile Organization — Removing Bureaucracy Without Losing Consistency Read the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.   "Before people understand what needs to change, and how they need to adopt, what it means to them in their day-to-day work, and how it's going to help and add value — those conversations are missing." - Bhavin Shukla   Bhavin brings a challenge many organizations face but few talk about openly: de-scaling. He's working with an organization that adopted a scaling framework for consistency — shared language, standardized tooling, uniform processes across business units. It worked for alignment, but it also created bureaucracy. Now leadership wants to become leaner and more nimble. The problem? The de-scaling itself is happening cookie-cutter style. Changes are being rolled out — new framework versions, new tools, flow metrics

  • The Hidden Cost of Always Saying Yes — How a Helpful Scrum Team Nearly Self-Destructed | Bhavin Shukla

    31/03/2026 Duração: 15min

    Bhavin Shukla: The Hidden Cost of Always Saying Yes — How a Helpful Scrum Team Nearly Self-Destructed Read the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.   "It was sort of making me feel as a Scrum Master, like it's a slow self-destruction mode they are in. Good intentions, but it wasn't helping them, and that's something that they were not able to notice." - Bhavin Shukla   Bhavin tells the story of a banking team that looked like every Scrum Master's dream on day one — humming, cracking jokes, in the zone. But underneath the positive energy, the data told a different story. Sprint commitments kept overflowing, tech debt was rising, P1 and P2 production issues were climbing, and decision latency was immense. The root cause? This team of genuinely helpful people couldn't say no. They wanted to help everyone who came to them, and that desire was slowly drowning them. No one

  • When Protecting Your Agile Team Becomes the Barrier to Their Growth | Bhavin Shukla

    30/03/2026 Duração: 17min

    Bhavin Shukla: When Protecting Your Agile Team Becomes the Barrier to Their Growth Read the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.   "The perception I had was safe space means insulation from creating that transparency. It was not about protecting the teams. It was actually about giving them the voice, giving them the platform." - Bhavin Shukla   Bhavin shares a story from early in his Scrum Master journey, working with two teams building a BI and regulatory platform in Australia. When he arrived, team morale was low — people buried in their screens, going for coffee alone, no healthy debates happening. His natural instinct kicked in: protect the team, help them gel, get the best out of them. But his coach asked a question that changed everything: "What's the balance between protecting the team and creating visibility and transparency?" Bhavin realized he'd been shieldi

  • The Firewall Product Owner, Turning PO Anti-Patterns Into Opportunities for Growth | Iryna Stelmakh

    27/03/2026 Duração: 15min

    Iryna Stelmakh: The Firewall Product Owner, Turning PO Anti-Patterns Into Opportunities for Growth Read the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes. The Great Product Owner: Market-Oriented and Vision-Driven "Great product owners don't just manage backlog items — they own the product vision and make sure the team understands how their work creates real value." — Iryna Stelmakh   Iryna describes the best product owners she's worked with through three qualities. First, they understand the market and the users deeply. Second, they can explain the business logic behind decisions — not just what to build, but why it matters. Third, they work closely with the team and treat them as partners in solving problems, not executors of tasks. The best PO Iryna worked with was responsible for sharing the business mindset, giving the team perspective and the possibility to contribute b

  • The Almost Invisible Scrum Master, Why Team Independence Is the Ultimate Success Metric | Iryna Stelmakh

    26/03/2026 Duração: 14min

    Iryna Stelmakh: The Almost Invisible Scrum Master, Why Team Independence Is the Ultimate Success Metric Read the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.   "A successful Scrum Master is almost invisible — not because they don't contribute, but because the team is no longer dependent on them for every decision." — Iryna Stelmakh   Iryna offers a powerful definition of success for Scrum Masters: becoming almost invisible. Not because the Scrum Master isn't contributing, but because the system works — with or without them. The team takes ownership of delivery, solves problems collaboratively, and continuously improves its own process. Each team member can propose, vote, and suggest changes because the environment has a high level of trust.   When that happens, Iryna explains, the Scrum Master becomes more of a system observer and catalyst rather than a daily driver. As Vas

  • Fighting Agile Theater, When Organizations Adopt the Ceremonies But Not the Mindset | Iryna Stelmakh

    25/03/2026 Duração: 16min

    Iryna Stelmakh: Fighting Agile Theater, When Organizations Adopt the Ceremonies But Not the Mindset Read the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.   "Transparency can be uncomfortable, but without transparency, there is no real improvement." — Iryna Stelmakh   Iryna brings a challenge she calls "Agile Theater" — organizations that implement all the visible parts of Agile (the ceremonies, the boards, the terminology) while the underlying mindset remains unchanged. Decisions stay centralized, transparency is avoided, and problems are hidden. As she puts it: "Teams go through the emotions of Agile without actually benefiting from it."   But her real challenge goes deeper. Iryna shares a story about building trust with outsourcing clients. Five days into a new assignment on a project the company had worked on for over ten years, she received an email listing team members

  • When Communication Clarity Matters More Than Technical Complexity, A Healthcare Project That Fell Apart | Iryna Stelmakh

    24/03/2026 Duração: 15min

    Iryna Stelmakh: When Communication Clarity Matters More Than Technical Complexity, A Healthcare Project That Fell Apart Read the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.   "Communication clarity is more important than technical complexity, because if you do not understand, it's pretty hard to execute." — Iryna Stelmakh   Iryna shares one of her most painful career stories — a project in the healthcare domain focused on cancer treatment research data. When she joined, she was managing around 9 projects simultaneously and agreed to take this one on the condition that a strong technical lead would own the technical direction. The project began with a critical misunderstanding: sales had communicated that the client needed a database redesign, but the client actually needed a migration to a different database type. Similar words, fundamentally different work.   For three mo

  • When "Agile" Becomes a License to Change Everything, The Cost of No Rules in Backlog Management | Iryna Stelmakh

    23/03/2026 Duração: 15min

    Iryna Stelmakh: When "Agile" Becomes a License to Change Everything, The Cost of No Rules in Backlog Management Read the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.   "For me, it was pretty hard to explain that Agile is about cost reduction, and not about cost increasing." — Iryna Stelmakh   Iryna shares a story from one of her first projects as a Scrum Master, working with a client from Israel who saw Scrum as an open invitation to add anything to the backlog at any time. For this client, agility meant unlimited flexibility — the freedom to extend not just the product backlog but the sprint backlog, multiple times per sprint. As Vasco points out, this is a pattern many teams recognize: when there's no cost to disrupting a sprint, it becomes effortless to keep piling on work, destroying the very predictability that sprints are designed to create.   Iryna struggled to push

  • BONUS Why 98% of Innovation Fails Before It Reaches a Single Customer With Lorraine Marchand

    21/03/2026 Duração: 33min

    BONUS: Why 98% of Innovation Fails Before It Reaches a Single Customer Lorraine Marchand has spent three decades helping organizations innovate in environments where failure carries real consequences. In this episode, she shares the frameworks, stories, and hard-won lessons from her time at IBM Watson Health and beyond — starting with the summer her father handed her a stopwatch and a problem to solve at a diner. The Sugar Cube That Started It All "At the age of 12, I learned that problem solving was fun. It was really safe to experiment, and it turned out to be lucrative, because we earned some revenue and royalties from our sugar cube."   Lorraine's innovation journey began with her father — a serial inventor who challenged his kids to identify and solve real problems. One summer, he took Lorraine and her brother to the Hot Shops Cafeteria in the Baltimore-Washington area with stopwatches, graph paper, and 3-color pens. Their assignment: figure out what was slowing down table turnover. After three

  • BONUS Why Every Organization Reinvents Silos—And What to Do About It With Roland Flemm

    20/03/2026 Duração: 34min

    BONUS: Why Every Organization Reinvents Silos—And What to Do About It Today we speak with Roland Flemm, co-creator of Org Topologies and co-author of 10X Org — Powered by Org Topologies. Roland has spent decades in the trenches—first as a developer, then in infrastructure, and finally as a Scrum Master, trainer, and organizational design consultant. In this episode, he explains why even teenagers with zero corporate experience instinctively create departmental silos, why making every team faster doesn't make the whole organization faster, and how leaders can use the Org Topologies map to see their organization as it actually is—not as the org chart says it should be. From Developer to Org Designer: Four Decades of Hitting the Same Wall "I felt many, many times the limitations of organizational structures stopping me from using my common sense to make people work together in a proper way."   Roland's career spans over 40 years, starting as a developer in 1984. After a decade writing code and anoth

  • BONUS Toyota's Real Secret Isn't the Tools — It's the Attitude Towards Learning That Changes Everything With Katie Anderson

    19/03/2026 Duração: 34min

    BONUS: Katie Anderson, Toyota's Real Secret Isn't the Tools — It's the Attitude Towards Learning That Changes Everything Katie Anderson joins us to explore the real engine behind Toyota's legendary success — and it's not what most people think. Drawing from her years living in Japan and her close relationship with 40-year Toyota veteran Isao Yoshino, Katie reveals why tools alone will never create lasting transformation. We explore the Doer Trap, the Telling Habit, and why hansei (deep reflection) is the most productive practice leaders keep skipping. The Only Secret to Toyota "The only secret to Toyota is its attitude towards learning. We don't even notice, and we take it for granted."   Katie moved to Japan over 11 years ago as a continuous improvement practitioner and got to know Isao Yoshino, a Toyota leader with 40 years of experience. After repeatedly asking him what made Toyota so successful, he finally offered an almost offhand answer: "The only secret to Toyota is its attitude towards learn

  • BONUS How to Build Teams That Think, Own, and Execute Without Burnout With Sid Jashnani

    18/03/2026 Duração: 30min

    BONUS: How to Build Teams That Think, Own, and Execute Without Burnout What if the problem isn't your people—but how your leadership shows up? In this episode, Sid Jashnani unpacks how Agile thinking, EOS (the Entrepreneurial Operating System), and his DELTA Delegation Ladder can help leaders build teams that truly own outcomes, execute without micromanagement, and grow the business—without burning out leaders or teams. The Breaking Point: When Smart People Don't Own Outcomes "I realized that I was the system, I was the bottleneck. And I was the one orchestrating everything. And if I were to step away for just going for dinner with my family, I would still get a call from someone."   Around 2014, Sid was running a thriving systems integration company with great people—people he trusted and loved working with. But they weren't owning outcomes. They were busy, but not always productive. Every decision fell back on Sid, and when the calls kept coming during family dinners, he started responding with

  • BONUS Guardrails Over Processes—How to Scale Teams Without Killing Creativity With Prashanth Tondapu

    17/03/2026 Duração: 31min

    BONUS: Guardrails Over Processes—How to Scale Teams Without Killing Creativity What actually slows down tech teams—lack of talent, or lack of ownership? In this episode, Prashanth Tondapu shares lessons from leading through global-scale failures, scaling from a small team to a 100-person company, and discovering why guardrails beat rigid processes when it comes to building teams that own outcomes and execute with discipline. Diffusion of Accountability: When Everyone Is Responsible, Nobody Is "Crisis is not the problem. Crisis is the one that uncovers the problem that has always existed."   Early in his career, Prashanth witnessed a large-scale failure at a major technology company—not because the team lacked talent, but because accountability had become diffused. When too many people are responsible for something, it translates to nobody being responsible. The team was brilliant individually, but there was no clear demarcation of who owned what outcome. On good days, everything worked. But when thi

  • BONUS Why the Spotify Model Didn't Work (Even at Spotify) With Marcus Hammarberg and Tore Fjaertoft

    16/03/2026 Duração: 44min

    BONUS: Why the Spotify Model Didn't Work (Even at Spotify) Imagine a company that spends a year building an iPad app—and on launch day the product owner says: "Now it'll be interesting to see IF anyone uses it." In this episode, Marcus Hammarberg and Tore Fjaertoft share why organizations keep installing frameworks like software, why it still doesn't work, and what they've learned from places like Spotify about treating your way of working as a product in itself. When Copying Without Adopting Becomes the Norm "It becomes more about following whatever this framework tells you to do, rather than to understand what the problem you're trying to solve is all about."   Marcus and Tore met at a consultancy in Malmö and within 15 minutes realized they shared the same frustrations—despite coming from opposite directions. Marcus comes from the ground up as a software developer and coach, while Tore works top-down with leadership teams on product organization design. Both had worked at Spotify and both had s

  • BONUS The Human Architect Still Matters—AI-Assisted Coding for Production-Grade Software With Ran Aroussi

    14/03/2026 Duração: 37min

    BONUS: Why the Human Architect Still Matters—AI-Assisted Coding for Production-Grade Software How do you build mission-critical software with AI without losing control of the architecture? In this episode, Ran Aroussi returns to share his hands-on approach to AI-assisted coding, revealing why he never lets the AI be the architect, how he uses a mental model file to preserve institutional knowledge across sessions, and why the IDE as we know it may be on its way out. Vibe Coding vs AI-Assisted Coding: The Difference Shows Up When Things Break "The main difference really shows up later in the life cycle of the software. If something breaks, the vibe coder usually won't know where the problem comes from. And the AI-assisted coder will."   Ran sees vibe coding as something primarily for people who aren't experienced programmers, going to a platform like Lovable and asking for a website without understanding the underlying components. AI-assisted coding, on the other hand, exists on a spectrum, but at ev

  • Product Owner Anti-Patterns, From Team Owner to Product Owner, And The PO Who Got It Right

    13/03/2026 Duração: 16min

    Junaid Shaikh: Product Owner Anti-Patterns, From Team Owner to Product Owner, And The PO Who Got It Right Junaid opens with a line that cuts straight to the most common PO anti-pattern: "You are the product owner, not the team owner." When he sees a PO slipping into command-and-control mode, he asks them one question: "What is your role?" They say "Product Owner." He says: "Exactly. You own the product, not the team. If you were meant to own the team, we'd call you a project manager." The worst case he witnessed: a PO who was so possessive of "his" team that he required approval on everything — processes, tools, even holiday requests. In sprint planning, he would assign stories to individual team members ("Mr. X, you take this one"). He'd estimate the work himself, and when developers pushed back, he'd override them: "I was a developer, I know how long this takes." For approaching PO anti-patterns, Junaid has a deliberate style: he doesn't confront upfront. He observes, takes notes, and starts by solv

  • How Scrum Masters Can Measure Their Own Impact, Practical Self-Assessment Metrics

    12/03/2026 Duração: 11min

    Junaid Shaikh: How Scrum Masters Can Measure Their Own Impact, Practical Self-Assessment Metrics Junaid's favorite retrospective format? The vanilla: what went well, what could have gone better, what to do better next. He's tried many formats — the Three L's (liked, learned, lacked), the Three Little Pigs, the sailboat — but the core principle is always the same. His practical advice: stick with a consistent format so the team gets better at the process itself rather than constantly adjusting to new concepts. One addition he insists on for any format: an appreciation component. In the rush to analyze processes and outcomes, teams often skip acknowledging how another team member, PO, or Scrum Master helped during the sprint. That appreciation builds trust, respect, and openness that feeds into subsequent sprints. On defining success as a Scrum Master, Junaid starts with a Peter Drucker quote: "You cannot improve something you cannot measure." He proposes several practical self-assessment metrics: Fir

  • Managing Uncertainty As A Scrum Master, How Scrum's Rhythm Creates Stability In Unstable Times

    11/03/2026 Duração: 15min

    Junaid Shaikh: Managing Uncertainty As A Scrum Master, How Scrum's Rhythm Creates Stability In Unstable Times For this week's coaching conversation, Junaid brings a challenge that resonates well beyond any single team: dealing with uncertainty. He references the World Uncertainty Index report from February 2026, which showed the highest levels of global uncertainty ever recorded — surpassing both the COVID pandemic and the 2008 financial crisis. This uncertainty doesn't stay at the geopolitical level. It seeps into teams. People show up stressed, unsure about what the next month or three months will bring. As Scrum Masters, we need to be cognizant of where our team members are coming from. Vasco adds an important layer: uncertainty operates at multiple levels within organizations. A colleague you depend on might be out sick for two weeks. A supplier might not deliver on time. Every dependency is a source of uncertainty. The question becomes: what in our processes is designed to accept and adapt to tha

  • Why Teams Go Through The Motions of Agile Without Being Agile, And What To Do About It

    10/03/2026 Duração: 15min

    Junaid Shaikh: Why Teams Go Through The Motions of Agile Without Being Agile, And What To Do About It Junaid's book recommendation is The Culture Map by Erin Meyer. As a Scrum Master working at companies like Ericsson and ABB — organizations that are a "United Nations" of cultures — understanding cultural tendencies has been essential. But Junaid goes further: you can customize the Culture Map framework even within a team of people from the same country, using the parameters to map different personalities. It's about how you use the tool, not just where people come from. He also recommends Scrum Mastery: From Good to Great Servant Leadership by Geoff Watts for practical advice on the servant leadership role, and regularly visits Scrum Alliance and Scrum.org for real-world insights from the community. On the topic of teams that self-destruct, Junaid paints a picture that many listeners will recognize. He picked up a team's retrospective history and cumulative flow diagrams and found problems a

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