Exploration of challenges with Scrum masters in a Scaled Agile environment, tech lead taking over scrum duties, struggles with communication and team collaboration, the impact of a new Scrum master, and the evolving role of Scrum masters in technical teams.
Effective communication and collaboration are crucial for team success in a Scaled Agile environment.
Addressing tech debt requires a cultural shift, recognition of efforts, and proactive collaboration within the team.
Deep dives
Challenges of Dealing with Over Seniority in a Tech Team
Management considers only assigning senior engineers to high-level tasks due to their expertise, leaving tech debt unaddressed. Despite a hiring freeze, additional middle and junior engineers would alleviate the tech debt backlog. The team's morale suffers because of the neglected tech debt, signaling a potential deadline before burnout or system failures occur.
Changing Mindsets Towards Tech Debt
A cultural shift is necessary to view tech debt projects as high-impact and valuable endeavors. Encouraging senior engineers to tackle tech debt effectively and recognizing their efforts can shift the team's perspective positively. Quantifying the business value and impact of addressing tech debt can help gain buy-in from management and the team.
Engaging Team Collaboration on Tech Debt
Encouraging collaboration within the team to proactively address tech debt issues and allocate time effectively. Initiating discussions on the importance of tech debt resolution during team meetings can create awareness and motivate team members to contribute.
In this episode, Dave and Jamison answer these questions:
One and a half year ago, I joined my current team as a tech lead, in an organisation that uses ‘Scaled Agile’. This was my first time joining an organisation that employed dedicated Scrum masters. In previous organisations, the role of Scrum master would usually fall upon a team member that felt comfortable doing so, and the last couple of years that ended up being me. I feel this worked out well and I managed to create teams that were communicating well and constantly iterating and improving.
Upon joining the team, I noticed that despite having a dedicated Scrum master, the team was not doing sprint reviews or retrospectives, and it felt like every team member was on an island of their own. In the months that followed I tried to reinstate these and improve teamwork and communication, but often felt blocked by the Scrum master’s inertia.
Eventually, they were let go and a new Scrum master was hired. This new collaboration did also not work out. They didn’t have enough of a technical background to engage with impediments, were trying to micromanage team members during Standups, and would continually try to skip or shorten retrospectives. If retrospectives were to occur at my insistence, they would try to determine actions without the team’s input, only to not do them and never look back at the outcome.
Two months ago the new Scrum master was let go and I was asked to take over their duties in the meantime. Ever since, it feels like the team finally owns their own Scrum process. Our collaboration is not perfect, but we’re finally tracking measurements, evaluating retrospective actions, and iterating as a team. However, the organisation wants us to go back to having a dedicated Scrum master. I’m not against this, but I’m afraid the next Scrum master might undo our efforts. How do we as a team navigate this situation to get an optimal outcome?
A listener named Max asks,
I’ve been working in a Data Engineering department at a mid-size product company for over 5 years. When I joined, we had a well-balanced team in terms of average proficiency - some juniors, some middles, and a few seniors. Over these years, we’ve developed a great internal culture where people can grow to a senior level pretty easily. The company itself is wonderful to work for, and we have a pretty low “churn rate” - most of my colleagues are highly motivated and don’t want to leave.
As a result, we now have only senior and staff engineers in the team. This is well-deserved - they all are great professionals, highly productive, and invaluable for the company, having domain knowledge and understanding of how all our systems work. Management wants them to take on only senior-plus-level tasks, which are usually larger projects and initiatives that involve a lot of collaboration with other departments, process changes or technical initiatives affecting our engineering practices. They have two reasons for this: 1) management doesn’t want to waste the time of such skilled professionals on smaller tasks; 2) management cares a lot about people’s morale, because losing them would be very harmful for the whole company, so they don’t want people to take on small and boring tasks.
At the same time, we have a HUGE backlog of tech debt, small improvements and refactoring initiatives. Ideally, we would hire 3-4 additional middle and junior engineers to share all backlogs with them, but we now have a hiring freeze. The amount of tech debt is starting to damage team morale on its own, and I feel like we have an unspoken deadline to deal with this problem, which could be someone’s burnout and departure, or a major outage in some vital services we support caused by ignoring tech debt.
How would you approach the problem of overseniority? I appreciate any advice, and thanks again for the show.
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