Team velocity is a measure of the amount of work a team can complete in a given time period, usually a sprint or iteration. It is calculated by adding up the story points or effort estimates of the user stories that were completed and accepted during the sprint. Team velocity can help project managers and teams to plan, monitor, and improve their performance and delivery. However, team velocity can vary due to various factors, such as changes in scope, team size, team skills, dependencies, risks, and impediments. Impediments are any issues or obstacles that prevent the team from achieving their goals or performing at their optimal level. Impediments can be internal or external, technical or non-technical, and can affect the team’s productivity, quality, morale, or collaboration. Some examples of impediments are: lack of resources, unclear requirements, technical debt, bugs, conflicts, communication gaps, etc. Therefore, it is important for the project manager and the team to identify, track, and resolve impediments as soon as possible, to avoid negative impacts on the team velocity and the project outcome. One of the best ways to do this is to use the daily standup meeting, which is a short, time-boxed, and focused meeting where the team members share their progress, plans, and problems. The standup meeting can help the project manager and the team to: - Align on the sprint goals and priorities - Monitor the team’s progress and performance - Identify any impediments or risks that are affecting or could affect the team’s velocity - Assign ownership and accountability for resolving the impediments - Collaborate and support each other to overcome the challenges - Adapt and adjust the plan as needed to meet the sprint and project objectives By using the standup meeting to assess impediments and problems, the project manager can help the team to improve their velocity and meet the next review gate goal. The other options are not the best choices, because: - Increasing the sprint duration to allow the team more time would violate the agile principle of delivering value in short and frequent iterations, and would not address the root causes of the low velocity. - Prioritizing the contents of the backlog and removing some stories would reduce the scope and quality of the project, and would not solve the impediments that are affecting the team’s velocity. - Creating a change request to modify the gate review goals would delay the project delivery and increase the cost and risk of the project, and would not improve the team’s performance or velocity. References:
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