Ensuring backlog items meet a clear, actionable standard before sprint planning.
Definition of Ready (DoR) is an artifact.
From the perspective of Scrum, the idea of Ready, as applied to a Backlog Item, represents everyone’s (Developers, Product Owner, & Stakeholders) understanding of what is needed to implement that Backlog Item. Since this is subjective and not objective, having a definition of what constitutes ready is not possible.
The danger of having a defined definition of Ready (DoR) is:
A solution that may enable the effective use of this practice may be to a different formula of naming to create disambiguation between the DoR and the DoD.
Every candidate Backlog Item should have:
Once candidacy is achieved then the Team & Stakehodlers can determin Ready with conversation.
As a general rule Developers should not take Backlog Item into a Sprint that they do not fully understand and agree, as a team, that there is a reasonable likelihood of being successful.
We partner with businesses across diverse industries, including finance, insurance, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, technology, engineering, transportation, hospitality, entertainment, legal, government, and military sectors.
Jack Links
Milliman
Kongsberg Maritime
Genus Breeding Ltd
Boxit Document Solutions
Bistech
Sage
MacDonald Humfrey (Automation) Ltd.
Akaditi
Workday
Freadom
ALS Life Sciences
Brandes Investment Partners L.P.
Healthgrades
SuperControl
Emerson Process Management
Microsoft
Graham & Brown
Department of Work and Pensions (UK)
New Hampshire Supreme Court
Ghana Police Service
Washington Department of Enterprise Services
Washington Department of Transport
Nottingham County Council
Teleplan
MacDonald Humfrey (Automation) Ltd.
Microsoft
Trayport
Slicedbread
Slaughter and May