Scrum teams are at the heart of the Scrum framework. Nevertheless, an integrated and systemic theory that can explain what makes some Scrum teams more effective than others is still missing. To address this gap, we performed a seven-year-long mixed-method investigation composed of two main phases. First, we induced a theoretical model from thirteen exploratory field studies. Our model proposes that the effectiveness of Scrum teams depends on five high-level factors - responsiveness, stakeholder concern, continuous improvement, team autonomy, and management support - and thirteen lower-level factors. In the second phase of our study, we validated our model with a Covariance-Based Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) analysis using data from about 5,000 developers and 2,000 Scrum teams that we gathered with a custom-built survey. Results suggest a very good fit of the empirical data in our theoretical model (CFI = 0.959, RMSEA = 0.038, SRMR = 0.035). Accordingly, this research allowed us to (1) propose and validate a generalizable theory for effective Scrum teams and (2) formulate clear recommendations for how organizations can better support Scrum teams.
SEET - Software Engineering Education and Training
Samuel Ferino Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Marcelo Fernandes Federal Institute of Rio Grande do Norte, Elder Cirilo Federal University of São João del Rei, Lucas Agnez Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Bruno Batista Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Uirá Kulesza Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Eduardo Aranha Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte, Christoph Treude University of Melbourne