Workshop Navigation
Facilitating the Workshop
Purpose: a facilitator’s role is to guide a group toward shared understanding, decision-making, or problem-solving.
Style of Delivery: facilitation is interactive, encouraging active participation, discussion, and group dynamics.
Content: in facilitation, the content often evolves based on group input and collaborative activities.
Tools and Techniques: facilitators use tools like brainstorming exercises, group activities, whiteboards, or even timeboxing techniques to keep participants engaged.
Role of the Audience: in facilitation, the audience plays an active role, engaging in discussions and shaping outcomes.
Outcome: facilitation is more about collaboration, achieve consensus, or making decisions as a group.
Duration
1-2 hours up to a full day, depending on the number of features being broken down, complexity of the features and if they are in the same Value Stream.
Presenting the Process
- Introduction
- What is a Feature Breakdown?
- Why is it important in Agile?
- Application
- Breaking down features (large work) into smaller work items
- Benefits
- Faster delivery of high-priority work
- Broken down features allow value to be delivered early and often
- Example Scenarios
- Use real-world or hypothetical examples to illustrate Feature Breakdown in action
- Implementation Tips
- Tools or frameworks (like SAFe/Miro boards)
- Common challenges and how to overcome them
- Q & A or Interactive Exercise
- Let your audience practice Feature Breakdown and ask questions.
Common Anti-Patterns
- Lack of Clear Objectives – Without a defined goal, discussions can become unfocused.
- Overloading the Workshop – Trying to break down too many features at once can lead to rushed decisions.
- Ignoring Stakeholder Input – Failing to involve key stakeholders can result in misaligned priorities.
- Skipping Prioritization – If features aren’t ranked by importance, teams may waste time on low-impact work.
- Failure to Define Acceptance Criteria – Without clear success metrics, development can become ambiguous.
- Feature Creep – Adding unnecessary features without considering feasibility or value.
- Endless Debates – Getting stuck in discussions without making actionable decisions.
- Top-Down Decision Making – Leadership dictating features without team collaboration.
- Ignoring Technical Constraints – Designing features without considering development limitations.
- Lack of Follow-Up – No clear next steps, leading to stalled progress.
