A project team member tells the project lead that expecting a similar delivery output for every day of the sprint is not realistic. The project lead reports this to the project management office (PMO). What should the project lead do?
A.
Discuss the issue with the product owner
B.
Discuss this with the project team in the next sprint retrospective meeting
C.
Discuss this with the project team in the next sprint planning meeting
Daily output is naturally variable in agile work due to task complexity, collaboration needs, testing, and integration. The appropriate forum to address process misunderstandings and improve how work is planned, tracked, and communicated is the sprint retrospective (B). Retrospectives are designed for the team to inspect how they worked and adapt their practices, including how they interpret progress metrics (e.g., burn-down charts) and how they communicate flow versus “daily productivity.” Handling it in sprint planning (C) focuses on selecting work and defining goals; it is not the best venue for deeper process improvement and behavioral expectations. Discussing with the product owner (A) may be useful if stakeholder expectations are driving pressure, but the immediate need is to align the team and correct misconceptions internally. Going to the PMO manager (D) can create unnecessary escalation and may erode team self-management. Addressing it in the retrospective reinforces agile principles, improves shared understanding of progress measurement, and results in actionable adjustments (e.g., smaller stories, WIP limits, clearer DoD) to stabilize delivery predictability.
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