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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?

Lauri Borén
Replying to @victorkernes

I’ve seen a lot of good arguments for working off the same backlog and having everything visualized there, if you are a cross functional team.

Lauri Borén
Replying to @victorkernes

In this kind of system, individual items that do not need design can of course skip stages and go directly to the (prioritized) ready for development column.

Lauri Borén
Replying to @victorkernes

A key benefit of a shared backlog and process is that it’s easy to see what’s going on, identify bottlenecks, work piling up etc. Lastly, something to avoid is doing a ton of design upfront, filling the ready for development with items that *might* be built months from now.

Victor Kernes
Replying to @boren

Amazing, thank you for these recommendations @boren! Curious to hear why you’d recommend against doing design work ahead of time?

Lauri Borén
Replying to @victorkernes

I’m not entirely against doing design ahead of time, but I’d be mindful about the amount of work. The world around us changes all the time, and this means that the priorities on products also shift.

Lauri Borén
Replying to @victorkernes

Releasing products — and design — in small continuous iterations reduces the risk of design ”going stale” or being outdated. As designers we can test things ahead of time with prototypes or wireframes, but I the true validation happens in production environment with real users.

Lauri Borén
Replying to @victorkernes

@mattstrom has a good piece of writing that digs a bit deeper from a few years ago here: matthewstrom.com/writing/just-i…

Just-in-time Design
Victor Kernes
Replying to @boren @mattstrom

Ohh, fantastic, thank you! I’ll give this a read 🤓