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The Daily Stand-up Meeting: A Grounded Theory Study

Sammendrag

The daily stand-up meeting is one of the most used agile practices but has rarely been the subject of empirical research. The present study aims to identify how daily stand-up meetings are conducted and what the attitudes towards them are. A grounded theory study with 12 software teams in three companies in Malaysia, Norway, Poland and the United Kingdom was conducted. We interviewed 60 people, observed 79 daily stand-up meetings and collected supplementary data. The factors that contributed the most to a positive attitude towards the daily stand-up meeting were information sharing with the team and the opportunity to discuss and solve problems. The factors that contributed the most to a negative attitude were status reporting to the manager and that the frequency of the meeting was perceived to be too high and the duration too long. Based on our results, we developed a grounded theory of daily stand-up meetings and proposed empirically based recommendations and guidelines on how to organize them. Organizations should be aware of the factors that may affect the attitude towards daily stand-up meetings and should consider our recommendations and guidelines to make this agile practice as valuable as possible.
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Kategori

Vitenskapelig artikkel

Oppdragsgiver

  • Research Council of Norway (RCN) / 231679/F20
  • Research Council of Norway (RCN) / 231679

Språk

Engelsk

Forfatter(e)

Institusjon(er)

  • Universitetet i Oslo
  • SINTEF Digital / Software Engineering, Safety and Security

År

2016

Publisert i

Journal of Systems and Software

ISSN

0164-1212

Forlag

Elsevier

Årgang

114

Side(r)

101 - 124

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