“Teams are self-managing. We don’t need a Scrum Master telling us what to do.”
That’s a common misconception. Yes, Scrum is designed for self-managing teams, but self-management is not the absence of structure.
Autonomy exists within constraints—Scrum events, commitments, and organisational needs define the playing field. Without that, self-management turns into chaos.
Scrum Masters aren’t there to micromanage. They ensure the team has clarity, alignment, and accountability. They protect Scrum, not by controlling every decision, but by maintaining the conditions for teams to thrive.
If a team is failing to deliver, struggling with impediments, or ignoring Scrum principles, a Scrum Master doesn’t just “facilitate” and hope things improve. They step in and fix what’s broken.
Self-management works best when balanced with strong leadership.
Where do you draw the line between autonomy and intervention?
If you've made it this far, it's worth connecting with our principal consultant and coach, Martin Hinshelwood, for a 30-minute 'ask me anything' call.
We partner with businesses across diverse industries, including finance, insurance, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, technology, engineering, transportation, hospitality, entertainment, legal, government, and military sectors.
Capita Secure Information Solutions Ltd
Big Data for Humans
SuperControl
Genus Breeding Ltd
Hubtel Ghana
NIT A/S
Schlumberger
Brandes Investment Partners L.P.
Freadom
Slicedbread
Sage
Ericson
Philips
Lockheed Martin
Epic Games
Cognizant Microsoft Business Group (MBG)
Slaughter and May
YearUp.org
New Hampshire Supreme Court
Ghana Police Service
Department of Work and Pensions (UK)
Washington Department of Enterprise Services
Washington Department of Transport
Royal Air Force
Flowmaster (a Mentor Graphics Company)
Xceptor - Process and Data Automation
Schlumberger
CR2
Genus Breeding Ltd
Qualco