4.6 Article

Maturing the Scrum Framework for Software Projects Portfolio Management: A Case Study-Oriented Methodology

Journal

IEEE ACCESS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages 123283-123300

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3224447

Keywords

Systematics; Project management; Entertainment industry; Switches; Length measurement; Planning; Agile methodology; project management maturity; smart cities; sprint length; adaptive project portfolio management

Funding

  1. University of Trento (NEOASSUNTI) [40202312]
  2. Maria Zambrano Contract of the Universidad Complutense de Madrid - Ministerio de Universidades
  3. European Union Next Generation Program

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This paper explores the strategies for maturing the Scrum framework in portfolio management through a case study approach. It proposes a heuristic scoring technique and a multi-level refinement structure to enhance team performance monitoring and the realization rate of release planning.
In the modern era, information technology-based solution providers are encountering a growing request for satisfying the versatile requirements of their customers in terms of software applications. To this end, specific approaches have been designed to streamline the way of accomplishing software projects in an efficient manner, i.e., agile-oriented frameworks. Even though previous studies have highlighted variations of such a framework, the literature has not addressed the adaptations required in response to the gradual maturity of a wide-ranging case study dealing with software applications. Following a case study-oriented methodology, this paper focuses on elaborating a set of workable maneuvers to mature the Scrum framework when applied to portfolio management. Particularly, we highlight how Scrum should be adapted from its basic setting to a vision and goal-oriented configuration or Scrumban under certain conditions. As a maturing practice, we propose a heuristic scoring technique to determine the sprint length of subprojects with different characteristics in the context of a portfolio. The study also introduces a multi-level refinement structure to enhance the monitoring of the teams' performance under the proposed mature framework. The results obtained display a considerable spike in the realization rate of release planning in light of the actual performance.

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