![]() In the 2020 version, the three questions are gone. “Three Questions” (for the Daily) – In previous versions, the three questions were meant as an example for a typical Daily.It is not even mandatory to decompose PBIs into tasks. “Task Board”, “Sprint Board” – Scrum does not prescribe a task board.“Ceremonies” – The Scrum Guide only refers to “Scrum Events”, not “Scrum Ceremonies”.“Burndown Charts” – While these are mentioned (along with burnup charts and cumulative flow diagrams, they are only mentioned as examples, not as a prescriptive part of the Scrum framework.“Definition of Ready” or “DoR” – The Scrum Guide states “Product Backlog items that can be Done by the Scrum Team within one Sprint are deemed ready for selection in a Sprint Planning event.” but does not say anything about the need for further rules to determine PBI readiness.“User Story” – The Scrum Guide only refers to “Product Backlog Items”.These are some terms not included in the Scrum Guide: ![]() It is mostly meant as a reminder of how basic and lightweight the definition of Scrum actually is and how much flexibility we have in applying it. Note that this is not meant as any kind of judgement on whether or not these terms or the concepts behind them are useful. I collected some terms that do not appear in the Scrum Guide – and I have a feeling that to some, these might be quite surprising, as many of these terms have become a part of the folklore surrounding Scrum. ![]()
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