Daily Stand-up – YOUR most important rules

Daily Stand-up – YOUR most important rules

HomeDevelopment That PaysDaily Stand-up – YOUR most important rules
Daily Stand-up – YOUR most important rules
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Previously, I laid out my rules for the Daily Stand-up. Now it's your turn to voice YOUR opinion.

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I asked for YOUR rules for daily stand-up. You did not disappoint!

Thank you for your comments. There was a lot more than I could fit into a single episode.

As expected, I was curious to see if your rules matched mine. (SPOILER: Not really.)

1:04 – You have to do stand-up performances every day
1:04 – YOU HAVE TO DO STAND-UP!
1:12 – Every day at the same time
1:00 – Keep it short
2:19 – Get up!

CREDITS:
© Fox (1999)
Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
Cast: Edward Norton, Brad Pitt
Director: David Fincher
Producers: Ross Grayson Bell, John S. Dorsey, Arnon Milchan, Cen Chaffin, Art Linson
Screenwriters: Chuck Palahniuk, Jim Uhls

Music: 260809 Funky Nurykabe: ccmixter.org/files/jlbrock44/29186

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72. Daily stand-up – YOUR most important rules
# #DevelopmentThatPays

Previously… Brad's 5 Rules for Daily Stand-Up The first rule of stand-ups is, "You must do stand-ups daily." The second rule of stand-ups is, "YOU MUST DO STAND-UPS." The third rule of stand-ups is, "At the same time every day." The fourth rule of stand-ups is, "Keep it short!" The fifth rule of stand-ups is, "You must stand." Your Rules – My thanks to everyone who took the time and effort to share their rules for daily stand-ups with me. There's some great stuff here. Some ideas that were new to me. And lots of common themes. I was curious to see if your rules match mine. No one questioned the need for daily stand-ups, so the first two rules remain. What about Rule 3? Lots of agreement about picking a time and sticking to it. And some ideas to make that happen, like a reminder in advance — and a penalty for noncompliance. And Rule 4: Keep it short. Let's get back to that in a moment. Rule 5 was, "Stand up!" This was mentioned exactly once. And even then, it was in reference to a multi-location team. I completely understand that it's a bit weird to stand up in front of a video conference camera. That makes me wonder: has this rule had its day? Is the physical act of standing up not delivering the promised benefit? Let me know in the comments below. Where do we stand? So far, we have three rules that are solid, and one where the jury is still out. We have one more rule to look at: Rule 4 – "Keep it short." There was a lot of agreement that stand-up meetings need to be kept short. And there was no shortage of suggestions on how to achieve this. Which is a bit of a problem for my list of simple rules. Because keeping stand-up meetings short is anything but easy. If it were easy, we could set an egg timer for 15 minutes. Why not 10 minutes? But no one suggested an egg timer. And no one suggested an alarm clock. And I'm glad they didn't. Because time isn't the problem. The problem is that stand-up meetings should be efficient and effective. It should just /"work/." That's the problem. That's the goal. Brevity is the byproduct. We'll get into what makes stand-up a "success" in the next episode.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3fqgA-wrq4E&list=PLngnoZX8cAn8NZIjKCfWOP3FaBTD6RcNN
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q_R9wQY4G5I

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