Contents
Should you repoint stories?
Generally re-estimating is useful when you completely blew it on the original estimate and can see that the mistake was a rare occurrence. (That is, if every estimate is systematically off by half I wouldn’t re-estimate.) Second, you should re-estimate when there has been a change in relative size.
Who accepts a story as done in agile?
In Agile Software Development, we use the User Story Definition Of Done(DOD) for User Stories to ensure the quality of work and to assess whether the team completes a User Story or not. If respected, the Definition of Done (DOD) in Scrum is keeping the development team away from the technical debt.
Who writes the acceptance criteria in agile?
product owner
Generally, acceptance criteria are initiated by the product owner or stakeholder. They are written prior to any development of the feature. Their role is to provide guidelines for a business or user-centered perspective. However, writing the criteria is not solely the responsibility of the product owner.
Why are story points so important in agile?
Story points are a useful unit of measurement in agile, and an important part of the user story mapping process. A number is assigned to each story to estimate the total effort involved in bringing a feature or functionality to life.
What do you mean by user story in agile?
In Agile a user story is a short, informal, plain language description of what a user wants to do within a software product to gain something they find valuable. User stories typically follow the role-feature-benefit pattern (or template):
How are technical stories written in agile development?
The Technical Stories are written targeting the team that will work on specific pieces of implementation or specific sub-systems. Acceptance Criteria are written to be appropriate for the context of the story – User or Technical.
How to use story slicing in agile development?
It is a really nice quick reference guide to slicing/splitting/narrowing/thinning/refining (whatever you want to call it — and there is some debate around the “right” terminology) user stories. There is more good stuff to find if you follow the link above.