Product Backlog vs Sprint Backlog
Hi Guys,
I know that Product Backlog should contains user stories and is managed by Product Owner, while that Sprint Backlog the responsible is the Team.
1) This image is really a Product Backlog?
http://epf.eclipse.org/wikis/scrum/Scrum/workproducts/resources/product…
2) This image is really a Sprint Backlog?
https://www.scrum.org/portals/0/Images/Sprint-Backlog.png
Thanks for your response
Regards
>>This image is really a Product Backlog? http://epf.eclipse.org/wikis/scrum/Scrum/workproducts/resources/product…
This looks like a reasonable example of a product backlog. I have no idea if it is a good well formed backlog however. I would need to see the detail that is on each of the PBI's. for that.
>>This image is really a Sprint Backlog? https://www.scrum.org/portals/0/Images/Sprint-Backlog.png
I would say no. It is a visual representation of the contents of a Sprint Backlog and not one itself. Think of the Sprint Backlog as those PBI's that you have agreed with the PO to attempt with a plan to complete them. So it is simply one or more PBI's broken down into a plan.
The most common form of a Sprint backlog is a bunch of tasks under each PBI.
Did that help?
Hi nsanzana,
1) This image is really a Product Backlog?
http://epf.eclipse.org/wikis/scrum/Scrum/workproducts/resources/product…
There is no rule in SCRUM forbidding this to be a product backlog. It is ordered and estimated, so the team should be able to work with it.
2) This image is really a Sprint Backlog?
https://www.scrum.org/portals/0/Images/Sprint-Backlog.png
This is a symbol picture of a sprint backlog. Of course a real sprint backlog needs content inside the rectangles: At least Descriptions and estimates for the PBIs and descriptions for the tasks.
Best, Ludwig
>This image is really a Product Backlog?
It would be...apart from the "By" attribute. This appears to show individual ownership of PBIs or their estimates. If either case is true, then that's not a Scrum Product Backlog. In Scrum the PBIs should be owned by the Product Owner, while the Development Team should be collectively responsible for estimates.
> This image is really a Sprint Backlog?
No. It looks like a schematic of a task board. The two states on the left (PBI and ToDo) may represent a valid Sprint Backlog if populating them is the output of Sprint Planning, and if they are regularly updated.
I like to oversimplify it to help those who are still new to Scrum as such :
Product Backlog: list of things that needs to be done to make the product come into existence
Sprint Backlog: list of things that needs to be done in the current Sprint, which includes selected Product Backlog items
Incidentally, a couple of years ago David Starr and Ryan Cromwell discussed exactly that taskboard image in the context of what should constitute a Sprint Backlog. You can read about it here:
https://www.scrum.org/About/All-Articles/articleType/ArticleView/articl…
Thank you Nicolas for strating this useful topic. Unfortunately the link is broken https://www.scrum.org/portals/0/Images/Sprint-Backlog.png which makes it hard to follow. Would you mind fixing it? Yours -Joost