You will go where you looking!

Ravishankar R
The Scrum Outlet
Published in
1 min readApr 1, 2024
Image Source : Unsplash

“You’ll go where you’re looking.”

When driving a car, your eyes determine the path your vehicle follows.

You will steer where you look. Anyone with a driver’s license probably knows this principle.

This principle also explains why Scrum Teams need a shared goal.

< One shared goal >

A clear, compelling, and shared goal increases the likelihood of everyone looking in the same direction.

As such, they’ll also move in the same direction to achieve their goal.

< Multiple shared goals >

If a Scrum Team has multiple goals that must be achieved simultaneously, chances are that only some people are looking in the same direction.

Potentially resulting in confusion, misunderstandings, and not achieving the goal(s).

< No shared goal >

Everyone is focused on their individual tasks, potentially all going in different directions.

There’s no collaboration, no shared focus, and no teamwork.

< Take away >

This is why having one shared goal as a Scrum Team makes sense. Ideally, one long-term goal and smaller short-term goals.

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Ravishankar R
The Scrum Outlet

An avid learner and strong believer on humanizing work. A freelance writer and a sense maker with little exposure to Agile and Scrum