In the retrospective meeting, developers and testers can sum up their work. These points can be compared to the objectives set at the beginning of the project. In this way, teams can improve their skills and achieve higher levels of efficiency. But how do you organize a retrospective meeting? Here are some quick “how-to” tips to help you manage a retrospective meeting quickly and successfully.”
Retrospection is one of the main and most important events for any scrum or agile teams. There are lot of ways teams does retrospection.
Some teams will use basic spread sheet to collect all the necessary points and it does work well to.
But many times, you could observe more time is going for managing data via spread sheets, getting tougher to collect feedback from people (many are not that OPEN to share feedback) or conducting voting kind of things on priorities and managing action items etc.
That’s where online retrospective tools would be of great help to teams.
There are lot of online retrospective tools available in the market and many of these are completely free to use and some of them offer either FREE trail or FREE option with limited features.
The intent of this article is to introduce you to all these free retrospective tools online and enable you to pick the right tool to conduct retrospectives engagingly with your teams.
Getting the Most Out of Online Retrospective Tools
Rarely agile teams use just one tool to conduct their retrospectives online. It’s usually a combination of different services. A typical example would include a video conferencing app (e.g. Zoom) a messenger (e.g. Slack), a retrospective sprint online tool to organize feedback, and in some cases, a whiteboard.
No matter what tools you use, here are some common attributes that you need to ensure those tools provide:
Good Retrospective Tools Facilitate Equal Feedback
Some voices in your team will be louder than others. Unfortunately, those loud voices tend to offset other team members’ opinions. Often this leads to an unbalanced view on the current problems.
A good online retrospective tool facilitates equal feedback from every team member. For example, when there’s a question “Why is our database access so slow?” pops up during the retrospective, the tool ensures that every participant provides their answers to this question by either collecting written feedback or controlling the time every team member gets to voice their opinion.
Example: Geekbot asks every team member the same question with Slack direct messages, so that even shy colleagues could easily provide their ideas in a written form rather than struggling to voice them in front of a group of people.
Useful Retrospective Online Tools Prevent Chaos
When your team members are active, many ideas will be put on the table, which is good. What’s not good is when you can’t organize these ideas and are left with a dozen solutions that don’t go well with each other.
Great retrospective tools make sure that the feedback from your team members can be easily organized. An example would be the ability to put ideas into related columns or tag ideas so that you could instantly see emerging themes rather than a bunch of disparate concepts.
Example: Trello allows you to easily create several columns and effortlessly drag items between these columns. The process is so simple it lets your team to group your ideas as fast as they are coming in.
Great Retrospective Tools Eliminate Groupthink
Another common issue with retrospectives is when team members see other ideas and stop thinking on their own. This is usually the case when someone else has voiced a strong opinion before.
In order to prevent that, a good retrospective tool ensures the feedback is gathered independently, asynchronously, or even anonymously, if the problem is persistent.
Example: Geekbot allows every team member to answer retrospective questions privately using Slack bot. After that all the answers from different team members are merged into a separate Slack channel.
Miro
Even though I haven’t used Miro for a retrospective yet, it would be unfair not to mention it given that MetroRetro is part of the list.
I have used it extensively for other types of meetings over the past year and it is definitely a suitable retro tool.
What you’ll get for free:
3 (retro) boards
Unlimited columns (much like MetroRetro, you can create sections as you wish)
Public and private boards
What’s missing:
Action tracking is difficult as Miro is not a dedicated retro tool
Remember what I wrote about MetroRetro’s UX? Since Miro is a highly versatile tool, you will end up spending a significant amount of time on the toolbar between things that you need and won’t need.
Conclusion
Online tools are becoming increasingly popular in the web industry. And for good reason. The best ones make it easier, save time and effort – or can even automate certain tasks (natural language processing for example).