Deleting the Product Backlog Is Your Salvation to Be Agile

Deleting the Product Backlog Is Your Salvation to Be Agile

Once the old goes away, the door opens for the?new.

Before I start telling you why deleting your Product Backlog is your key to freedom, let me ask you some questions:

  • How many items do you have in your Product Backlog?
  • When did you create your oldest Product Backlog Item?
  • How often do you refine something with your Product Team that never makes it to a Sprint but still has a safe place in your Product Backlog?

Please, take your time to reflect on these questions. It’s important to be brutally honest. Once I asked the same questions to myself, and I got the following:

  • 450 Product Backlog Items.
  • At least 100 items were refined, estimated, and never made to a Sprint. Three years and seven months was my oldest Product Backlog Item.

When I reflected on this situation, I was sure of only one thing:

I missed the mark of what being Agile?means.

Now let me share with you why deleting your Product Backlog might be your salvation for being Agile.

An Extensive Product Backlog Is a Strong Enemy for?Agility

Do you know what the meaning of being Agile is? I guess nowadays, everyone has a different interpretation of it. I need to share what I understand about Agile for this post’s purpose: delivering value to end-users and businesses sooner.

The challenge is that value is abstract and often interpreted differently. For me, delivering value means helping people progress on their challenges while generating something in return for the business.

Being comfortable with the unknown is key to being?Agile.

I believe everything boils down to embracing learning. We should simply create assumptions, validate them, learn something, inspect, and adapt. It doesn’t seem complicated, but somehow I’ve observed many people making it incredibly complex, including me.

For me, an extensive Product Backlog is precisely the opposite of Agile. You may say you are Agile, yet you:

  • Let items rot in your Product Backlog for years
  • Don’t dare to delete a Product Backlog Item because it’d piss off a critical stakeholder
  • Waste developers’ time by refining something that will never make it to a Sprint

I perceive any Product Backlog with more than three Sprints of work as extensive. Let’s be honest, are we trying to do Scrum or Waterfall? If a Product Backlog has more items than the Scrum team can take in a couple of Sprints, it’s a symptom that planning is more important than learning.

To deliver value, you’ve got to keep a lean Product Backlog. Don’t let the illusion of a plan fool?you.

Be Bold And Delete Your Product?Backlog

A few things make me panic more than an extensive Product Backlog. The reason is simple; I perceive that as a political approach. Let’s compare the Product Backlog with a political campaign.

  • A candidate will promise the world to the potential voters; everything is possible during the campaign
  • Once elected, the candidate will fail to keep more than half of the promises and will have to work on excuses to keep the voters calm
  • The promises remain unattended until the end of the mandate, and voters will feel fooled

Do you see the similarities between politicians and an extensive Product Backlog? It’s a massive list of vast promises that will NEVER be matched. That’s an unsustainable way of managing your Product Backlog.

Don’t fool your stakeholders by putting their wishes into the Product?Backlog.

I’ve been a Product Manager in several places until now, and for a long time, I took an unproductive and pointless approach during my first months. I used to do the following:

  • Read the whole Product Backlog.
  • Approach key stakeholders to understand the needs behind each item.
  • Enrich the Product Backlog Items based on my exchanges with Stakeholders.
  • Prioritize the Product Backlog.

Do you know which results I got? Much wasted time and more pressure from many different stakeholders. Everyone wanted something urgently, and nobody was willing to accept removing their items from the Product Backlog. My mistake was a common one:

I let stakeholders drive the car instead of taking the driving?seat.

Currently, the first thing I do is the following:

  • Understand the Product Strategy
  • Delete the Product Backlog
  • Define assumptions to check
  • Create Product Backlog Items related to the strategy

You may think it’s too radical to delete the Product Backlog. And you’re right. However, to deliver value faster, you’ve got to be extreme. Until you remove all the noise, you won’t have any time left to do what matters most.

Do stakeholders get mad when I delete their precious items? Yes, they do. But they get even crazier when they realize the product doesn’t reach the expected outcome.

A solid Product Manager does what it takes to deliver?value.

Let me tell you a secret: once, I deleted around five hundred Product Backlog Items. Guess how many stakeholders approached me about it. Only two. All the others didn’t raise a single concern. I learned that if you ask for permission, you have a greater chance of getting rejected, but if you are willing to take risks, the results may surprise you.

Without Conflicts, Agile Is?Dead

Pissing people off is the hardest part of doing what is right for the product. You cannot find ways of delivering value faster by pleasing everyone. That means conflicts and, consequently, stress. Your ability to handle conflicts will define your success as a Product Manager.

Like with everything in life, short-term benefits will guarantee long-term frustrations.

If your Product Backlog perfectly reflects the wishes of your stakeholders, they will be happy in the beginning and lately frustrated once you fail to match all of their expectations. Yet, if you take the hard way and embrace conflicts to reach commitment, you can lead the Scrum Team to deliver value instead of falling into a WaterScrumFall pattern.

To ensure you are not falling into an illusion validity trap, delete your Product Backlog every three months. Create space for the new and let the noise disappear. Give the Scrum team time to reflect on the learnings, evaluate what makes sense for this moment, and have a fresh start.

“Finally, the illusions of validity and skill are supported by a powerful professional culture. We know that people can maintain an unshakable faith in any proposition, however absurd, when they are sustained by a community of like-minded believers.”― Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and?Slow
Tim Ward

Chief Technologist

2 年

Not to introduce more terms ad concepts, but what if we thought of the backlog as OKRs. We have objectives that are bigger than a sprint. And a set of KRs that could be Sprint Goals. Of course we may need so me exploratory work to better understand how to build something to validate a KR. But that should be quick.

回复
Ryan Fullmer

Collaborative Workshops from Discovery to Delivery ?? Align Your Agile Teams to Important Outcomes ?? Create An Environment for Success

2 年

David Pereira This is a great point. When your product backlog becomes bloated, it creates friction and waste. Keeping the backlog managed and prioritized becomes more difficult. The backlog becomes a long queue instead of a representation of the highest priority work. The most powerful word for product management can be "No". It's tempting to say "yes" to everything and add it to the backlog. Stop adding backlog items that aren't aligning with the product vision and/or are not needed now or in the near term. As you point out, deleting items as part of backlog management is a great strategy to keep it Agile, aligned and focused to the product vision.

Ismail Mukadam

Product Leader | Co-Founder

2 年

Agreed

A relentless focus on value and solving the most important problems - this should be the focus, not maintaining or managing the backlog. I love your approach because it removes the distraction.

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