Stuck in a retro rut? Even in the best of times, running a well-planned, productive, and energetic retrospective meeting isn’t easy. Sketch Agile Coach Steph Weisenbach provides her insights about keeping the team engaged and accountable in a 100% virtual environment.Pre-COVID, there was no substitute for hands-on, interactive team meetings—agile retrospective meetings included. I admit, there’s nothing quite like collecting our thoughts on a project that’s already on its feet…especially when the meeting includes good snacks, a couple of anecdotes, and a great sense of humor. Those “retros” are hard work, but they can also be freeing and fun if you handle them correctly.
I realized quickly into the pandemic that we were going to have to get creative and turn our expectations upside down. Nothing in our careers has changed our workplace as dramatically and quickly as COVID. The world we’re all working in just became a whole lot more virtual, but that doesn’t mean you have to abandon your goals and passions for relentless improvement.
When you use the right tools in the right way, your retrospectives don’t have to become frustrating and impersonal. Virtual tools and effective meeting planning keep the team engaged and focused on organizational and personal progress.
This section may be a bit “back to basics” for some of you, but in our world, I find there are a lot of misinterpretations of what should take place in an agile retrospective meeting. (Just humor me while I put my coaching hat on for a minute.)
So, let’s review the purpose of a retro. We use retrospective meetings as dedicated time we’ve set aside as an organization or as a team to stop, focus, and discover areas and opportunities for improvement. If we don’t proactively structure this time, we will never unearth all the ways we can get better, and then the process just simply stagnates.
I’m not talking about the product – there are opportunities to inspect and adapt the product too (I’m looking at you, sprint review). I’m talking about unearthing how we work together and how satisfying the work is individually. Retros are prioritized, qualified time to examine and analyze not just quantitative data and metrics, but also qualitative data, like how we feel things are going.
Yes, feelings. Feelings matter, and so does everyone’s opportunity to articulate what we like, what we don’t like, and where we see things heading, especially if it’s not in a direction that looks healthy and satisfying for everyone in the room.
What with the disruption of life as we knew it, maybe now is the best time to examine every step of what you were doing and look at it in an entirely different way. Why not? It may not feel revolutionary or even that creative to start with something as basic as how you run a meeting, but I say: Lean into the chaos a little bit. With everything upended, you could find new and exciting ways of bringing out the best of your team by shaking things up a little.
Walk away from the generic format of: What went well, what didn’t, and what we want to change. Keep it interesting! Explore tools and exercises that disrupt everyone’s expectations a little, increase the fun and the engagement a lot, and free up intuition and creativity.
Feeling just so-so about your retros? You should be forgiven if the stress of the current moment has overwhelmed you and your group. Everyone needs a spark of creativity every now and again, and for that, I put together a short list of tools to mix it up a little.
Check out these examples below and bring some energy and life back to your retros.
This site lists a bunch of free activities to facilitate a number of goals, including generating insights, gathering data, and implementing the next step in your iteration.
Who doesn’t love a game? This dynamic index of agile games provides new and flexible (and hopefully fun) structures to your meetings.
Take a tour through this list of data-gathering activities to recharge retros from the stale—and expected—format.
No matter how you decide to structure your retro, there is still a general flow that you need to follow.
According to one of my bibles, “Agile Retrospectives: Making Good Teams Great” (Esther Derby and Diana Larsen), these are the foundational steps of a well-run retrospective meeting:
Even in the best of times, running a well-planned, productive, and energetic retrospective meeting isn’t easy. A virtual retro is even harder.
How does everyone avoid distractions, like actual live children doing classwork (or even more distracting things) in the same room? How do you prevent multitasking as a virtual participant? How do you keep everyone as glued to the virtual meeting as you did when you could actually all sit in the same conference room together (and when those distractions were outside of a very real, non-virtual, door)?
Then there are the limitations inherent in virtual meetings: Slow connections, terrible lighting, and stuttering video feeds. How can you read facial or body language if the screen freezes up or when someone’s audio drops?
The best you can do is establish working agreements and protocols for all of your virtual meetings. If everyone feels heard before they dial in, the more likely they’ll feel included and focused.
These are tips I use myself with my own teams, and by making little tweaks, it helps everyone feel more connected and engaged.
You’ve probably heard of most of these already and might in fact be using them. But if you are unsatisfied with your current collaboration tools, this list of free online tools might help you find something that works better for your team.
A free and easy-to-use online meeting tool for brainstorming ideas, voting, managing a meeting agenda, and discussing one idea at a time using a timer.
Free virtual sticky note downloads.
Free Kanban board that’s flexible for project and meeting management.
Free polling site to give everyone an opportunity to use their voice.
Two ubiquitous online conferencing tools that you’ve probably already heard of. But they’re easy to use, reasonably secure and private, the recording and sharing features are getting more robust all the time, and most of the team probably already has them installed.
Two of our favorite virtual whiteboard apps.
Collaboration boards to help visual organization and workspace planning.
There’s no set way to reinvent your organization when you have to make a shift as sudden as this one. The two best verbs we all have right now are: Listen and breathe. As long as you are focusing on incremental ways to improve and remove virtual barriers to success, you’ll find new ways to adapt and remain successful.
When you open the process to experimentation, the ideas will keep coming. Eventually, you will find your way to something that works. With time, patience, humor, and even more patience, this new normal will feel a lot less new and a whole lot more normal.
Ready to learn more about using agile practices while working remotely? Check out our virtual Business Agility Fundamentals certification and training class or our Agile Fundamentals Bootcamp if you want a little more technical depth!