Select the search type
  • Site
  • Web
Search

Strategic Growth Hub

AI for Scrum and Agile Teams

Transform your Agile practice with AI-powered tools and strategies. Learn how to leverage generative AI to accelerate sprint planning, enhance team collaboration, and deliver value faster—without losing the human-centered principles that make Scrum work.

Generative AI for Scrum Teams

Practical applications of AI across the entire Scrum framework

AI for ScrumMasters

Amplify your facilitation, coaching, and servant leadership with intelligent tools

Effective Scrum Developer with AI

Code smarter with AI-assisted development, testing, and continuous delivery

Learning Paths by Role

Customized journeys for ScrumMasters, Product Owners, and Developers

Quick Start Guide

Begin Your AI Journey

Transform your Scrum and Agile practices with AI-powered tools and techniques

Hands-on Workshop

Ready to Transform Your Scrum Team with AI?

Join the Generative AI for Scrum Teams Workshop

Stop wondering how AI fits into your Agile workflow. In this hands-on workshop, you'll learn exactly how to integrate AI tools into every sprint ceremony, backlog refinement session, and delivery cycle—without disrupting the Scrum framework that already works for your team.

What You'll Master:

  • AI-powered user story creation and refinement techniques
  • Automated test generation and code review strategies
  • Sprint planning acceleration with AI assistance
  • Real-world prompt engineering for development teams
  • Ethical AI integration within Scrum values

Perfect for: Scrum Masters, Product Owners, Development Teams, and Agile Coaches who want to boost productivity while maintaining team collaboration and quality.

Taught by Rod Claar, Certified Scrum Trainer with 30+ years of development experience and specialized AI-Enhanced Scrum methodology.

AI for Scrum and Agile Teams YouTube Playlist

 
 
✓ Featured Content

AI for Scrum and Agile Teams Videos

A curated playlist of specific YouTube content.

Search Results

24 Feb 2026

Step 2: Turn backlog items into “buildable slices” (small, testable, valuable)

Author: Rod Claar  /  Categories: Software Developer Learning Path  /  Rate this article:
No rating

What Makes a Slice “Buildable”

A buildable slice:

  • Produces user-visible behavior

  • Can be tested independently

  • Meets the Definition of Done

  • Contributes to a measurable outcome

  • Can be completed within a Sprint

If it requires multiple handoffs or partial completion, it is too large.


Practical Slicing Patterns

Use these techniques deliberately:

1. Workflow Step
Deliver one end-to-end step before the full process.

2. Happy Path First
Implement the simplest scenario before edge cases.

3. Single Rule Variation
Support one business rule before adding complexity.

4. Data Scope
Enable one user type or limited dataset first.

5. Risk-First Slice
Implement the most uncertain part early.


Example

Oversized Story:

Build reporting dashboard for release readiness.

Possible Slices:

  1. Display backlog readiness score for top 10 items

  2. Flag items missing acceptance criteria

  3. Highlight cross-team dependencies

  4. Show Sprint goal completion trend

  5. Export summary as PDF

Each slice is independently demonstrable.


Acceptance Criteria Discipline

Every slice should include:

  • Clear behavioral expectation

  • Explicit inputs and outputs

  • Testable conditions

If acceptance criteria contain ambiguity, refinement is incomplete.


Exercise

  1. Select one oversized backlog item.

  2. Split it into 3–5 buildable slices.

  3. Write acceptance criteria for each slice.

  4. Confirm each slice could be:

    • Built

    • Tested

    • Demonstrated

    • Released

If not, refine further.

Smaller slices reduce variability, improve predictability, and increase learning velocity.

Print

Number of views (80)      Comments (0)

Tags:

Search

Categories

19 Mar 2026

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

18 Mar 2026

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

17 Mar 2026

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

16 Mar 2026

0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

16 Mar 2026

0 Comments
Article rating: No rating

12 Mar 2026

Author: Rod Claar
0 Comments
Article rating: No rating
RSS
123