What is the empirical process control? How is scrum based on that?
Answer / Satyendra Kumar Sharma
Empirical Process Control refers to the practice of controlling a process by using direct observation and experimentation. Scrum is based on empirical process control as it relies on three pillars: Transparency, Inspection, and Adaptation, which allow teams to collectively inspect their progress during Sprint Reviews and make necessary adjustments to improve productivity and deliver value faster.
| Is This Answer Correct ? | 0 Yes | 0 No |
How the velocity of sprint is measured?
When should you use waterfall over scrum?
What project management tools are used in agile?
Are agile and scrum the same?
Do you think scrum can be implemented in all the software development process?
What do you know about impediments in scrum? Give some examples of possible impediments.
Mention what is shown in burnt down charts?
A member of the scrum team does not want to participate in the sprint planning meetings and considers meeting as a waste of time. How do you deal with that kind of attitude?
What is the difference between epic, user stories & tasks?
What is the difference between Sprint and Iteration in Scrum?
Do you know about agile manifesto? Explain in brief.
How do you track your progress in a sprint?