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Victor Kernes

Curious as a designer on a scrum team, do you have a separate backlog for design tickets? Or do they live in the overall “Backlog” bucket?

Jamie Lovelace
Replying to @victorkernes

Mine live alongside the rest of the teams, just with different labels, but it’s useful because they can get tagged as blocking etc. the design tickets, however, don’t get tracked in terms of team performance

Victor Kernes
Replying to @jamielovelace

Ah very nice. Appreciate you sharing! Could you share more about the tracking part? And once you finish a design ticket, do you re-assign to anyone? A developer or PM? I’m struggling with what counts as “done” for a design ticket, as “done” usually means shipped.

Al Power
Replying to @victorkernes @jamielovelace

I usually create an ‘epic’ ticket that lives in the backlog that’s purely a parent of all design tickets, so you can see progress. Once initial design ticket is done, dev can start. A lot of design finesse happens in browser so I work with devs iteratively.

Al Power
Replying to @victorkernes @jamielovelace

We were using scrum but experimenting with ShapeUp now so try and scope things end to end eg basecamp.com/shapeup/3.3-ch… and ‘done’ means deployed in prod.

Map the Scopes | Shape Up
Al Power
Replying to @victorkernes @jamielovelace

Linear gives a ‘burn up’ chart so you can see velocity related to time (you have to be hot on estimating relative sizes of tickets) + keeping tickets as atomic as possible means you can zoom out and see how many in todo for both dev/design - great at getting a progress gut check.

Al Power
Replying to @victorkernes @jamielovelace

Keeping tickets focused on a single thing helps comments stay clear. Finally we have sep tickets for release/comms/help docs etc so ‘released’ means everything has been completed. Can be stressful but I’m loving the process at the moment!

Victor Kernes
Replying to @apower @jamielovelace

Super helpful, thanks so much Al!