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Tag Archive Scrum

Scrum = Endless Meetings?

When Scrum Becomes a Meeting Machine

Agile project management is meant to accelerate value creation, not suffocate it in the calendar.

Reading time: approximately 7 minutes

In its original form, Scrum is not a cumbersome administrative apparatus, but a lightweight framework for leadership and delivery. That is precisely where its appeal lies: clear roles, clear cadence, clear responsibilities.[1] And yet many companies experience something entirely different: the day begins with the Daily Scrum, continues with refinement, stakeholder calls, alignment sessions, steering meetings and review preparation, and ends exactly where the actual work finally begins – in the evening.

To avoid misunderstandings: agile methods can indeed lead to better results. A large quantitative study of 1,002 projects shows a positive relationship between agile working, efficiency and stakeholder satisfaction.[11] The problem, therefore, is not agility itself. The problem is poor execution.

Anyone familiar with this situation feels the problem not only organisationally, but physically. After a day full of meetings, one is mentally tired, even though one has formally “done a lot”. One was busy, but not necessarily effective. Developers typically describe productive days not as days full of interruptions, but as days on which they can move substantial tasks forward with as few context switches as possible.[4]

“Simplicity — the art of maximising the amount of work not done — is essential.”

Principles behind the Agile Manifesto[2]

When Agility Is Misunderstood

Poor Scrum is not recognised by the fact that people talk to one another. It is recognised by the fact that communication becomes a substitute for leadership, prioritisation and clean product work. Every open issue is turned into a meeting. The backlog is vague, so it is discussed live. Responsibilities are not clearly separated, so too many people sit at the table. The Product Owner effectively becomes a committee, so prioritisation is renegotiated constantly. The Daily Scrum becomes a status show for management, although in truth it is intended for the daily adaptation of work towards the Sprint Goal.[1]

A second misconception is added to this: many companies confuse agile visibility with permanent availability. Yet visibility does not arise because everyone is everywhere. Visibility arises through clear goals, good artefacts, reliable decisions and documented results. If meetings instead become the primary steering instrument, work shifts out of the product and into the calendar.

Research describes precisely this mechanism. Microsoft reports that half of all meetings take place in exactly those time windows in which many people have natural productivity peaks; at the same time, the analysis shows how strongly focus work is fragmented by a mixture of meetings, messages and notifications.[3] Developer research adds that interruptions and context switching are not marginal issues, but central factors influencing the experience of productivity.[4]

The cost of such fragmentation becomes even clearer in interruption research: people sometimes work faster under interruption, but they pay for it with more stress, higher frustration, greater time pressure and increased effort.[5] More recent research in software engineering also shows that the type and urgency of interruptions can measurably alter processing time and stress responses.[6]

Does It Always Have to Be This Way?

No. And professionally speaking, it must not be this way if Scrum is taken seriously. The Scrum Guide explicitly describes Scrum as a lightweight framework with clearly time-boxed events. These events are intended to create regularity and specifically to minimise the need for additional meetings.[1] A Daily Scrum is limited to 15 minutes. Sprint Planning, Review and Retrospective also have clear maximum durations. Scrum is therefore not designed as a meeting culture, but as a rhythm for focusing on value creation.

The Agile Manifesto, too, does not think in terms of constant haste, but of sustainable performance. Agile processes should enable a steady pace indefinitely.[2] A team that is exhausted after every Sprint is not working agilely, but on depletion.

This distinction is crucial in management. A high cadence can be useful. Constant friction is not. A sporting organism lives from exertion and recovery, not from a permanently elevated pulse. The same applies to companies.

What Good Scrum Really Looks Like

Well-led Scrum does not create more meeting time, but better decisions in less time. The first test is the target picture. If the Product Goal and Sprint Goal are unclear, alignment automatically multiplies. If they are precise, the need for discussion noticeably decreases because the team can make its own decisions within clear guardrails.[1]

The second test is team architecture. Scrum is designed for small, focused, self-managing teams; the Scrum Guide typically refers to ten or fewer people.[1] If teams become larger, more heterogeneous or are pushed into too many dependencies, the coordination effort explodes. That is not a character flaw of the team, but a design flaw of the system.

Research into large-scale agile programme work shows exactly this: as the number of teams increases, the need for coordination rises significantly. Coordination practices must therefore be deliberately tailored to the context, rather than simply adding more and more routines.[10]

The third test is the handling of interruptions. Agile work naturally involves more interaction. That is not bad in itself. Studies on agile teams show that interruptions can have both positive and negative consequences: they can enable clarity, feedback and faster information flows, but also create stress, delays, distraction and quality losses. The decisive point is therefore not to abolish interaction, but to filter it, bundle it and channel it cleanly through roles.[7]

Calm, focused movement as a symbol of discipline and clarity
Recommendation: Use the garden or walking image here as a calm visual break.

What Companies Should Change Now

Anyone who wants to keep Scrum and agile project management, but end meeting fatigue, should not frantically search for the next framework. In most cases, it is enough to execute the existing logic properly again:

  • Sharpen goals. Product Goal and Sprint Goal must be so clear that they can replace decisions instead of creating new meetings.[1]
  • Reclaim the Daily Scrum. No reporting to managers, no problem-solving marathon, no extension to 30 or 45 minutes. Fifteen minutes, focused on progress, impediments and the next working day.[1]
  • Channel stakeholder contact. Customer and business input is valuable, but should preferably enter the system through the Product Owner, the Sprint Review and well-maintained backlogs, rather than unexpectedly overrunning the team during day-to-day work.[1][7]
  • Meet only with purpose and preparation. A simple rule often works wonders: no agenda, no meeting. Good remote-tested meeting practice requires precisely this – including a clear purpose, prepared materials and documented outcomes.[9]
  • Work asynchronously where real-time interaction is not necessary. Status updates, comments, advance feedback, low-conflict decisions and review preparation often belong in documents, tickets, videos or written comments – not in a live meeting.[8]
  • Take optionality seriously. Not everyone has to sit in every meeting. Those who only need to be informed can receive minutes, a recording or an entry in a live document.[9]
  • Defend focus windows. If the best working hours are systematically occupied by meetings, agility becomes mere reactivity. Protected blocks for concentrated value creation are sensible – anchored programmatically in the calendar, not merely wished for rhetorically.[3]
  • Take the Scrum Master role seriously. A good Scrum Master does not merely administer ceremonies, but protects the team’s ability to work, keeps timeboxes intact, removes impediments and prevents process overgrowth.[1][7]

“No agenda, no attenda.”

GitLab Handbook, meeting principle[9]

My Conclusion

Agility is strong when it combines discipline with adaptability. Not every conversation is waste. Not every interruption is harmful. But a company that continually sacrifices value creation for coordination is leading its system poorly. Scrum is supposed to make complexity manageable. If it produces exhaustion instead, the problem usually lies not in Scrum, but in its convenient misinterpretation.

The good news is this: one does not have to abolish agility in order to become productive again. One has to lead it more precisely. Less ritual. More goal clarity. Less compulsory attendance. More documented decisions. Less meeting morality. More ability to work. That is what proper, transferable and economically sensible Scrum looks like.

Sources

  1. Scrum Guides: The Scrum Guide.
  2. Principles behind the Agile Manifesto and Manifesto for Agile Software Development.
  3. Microsoft WorkLab: Breaking down the infinite workday.
  4. Meyer et al.: Software Developers’ Perceptions of Productivity.
  5. Mark, Gudith, Klocke: The Cost of Interrupted Work: More Speed and Stress.
  6. Ma, Huang, Leach: Breaking the Flow: A Study of Interruptions During Software Engineering Activities.
  7. Wiesche: Interruptions in Agile Software Development Teams.
  8. GitLab Handbook: Asynchronous communication for remote work.
  9. GitLab Handbook: All-Remote Meetings.
  10. Dingsøyr, Moe, Seim: Coordinating Knowledge Work in Multiteam Programs.
  11. Serrador, Pinto: Does Agile work? A quantitative analysis of agile project success.
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