V
Last updated
When the values of commitment, courage, focus, openness, and respect are embodied and lived by the Scrum Team, the *Scrum pillars* of transparency, inspection, and adaptation *come to life* and *build trust* for everyone. The Scrum Team members learn and explore those values as they work with the Scrum events, roles, and artifacts. the Scrum Values Poster
an optional, but often used, indication of the amount of Product Backlog turned into an Increment of product during a Sprint by a Scrum Team, tracked by the Development Team for use within the Scrum Team.
A requirement that has been reviewed and determined to support the delivery of the expected benefits is within the scope of the solution.
The process of checking that a deliverable is suitable for its intended use. See also requirements validation.
The worth, importance, or usefulness of something to a stakeholder in a context.
A complete, fact-based, time-series representation of the activities required to deliver a product or service.
Determining that a deliverable or artifact meets an acceptable quality standard. See also requirements verification.
A requirement that has been reviewed and is determined to be defined correctly adheres to standards or guidelines and is at an acceptable level of detail.
A prototype is used to drill down into a proposed solution to uncover requirements and design considerations through multiple layers of a solution that are not easily understood or discernible on the surface. It may include interaction between several solution components.
A set of conventions that define how requirements will be represented, how these representations will be organized, and how they will be related.
See value stream mapping.