A sprint review is a key event in Agile and Scrum that takes place at the end of each sprint. During the sprint review, the development team, product owner, scrum master, and relevant stakeholders come together to inspect the work completed during the sprint and adapt the product backlog as needed.
Demonstration of Completed Work: The development team presents and demonstrates the features or increments completed during the sprint, showing a working version of the product.
Feedback Collection: Stakeholders, including the product owner and customers, provide feedback on the demonstrated work. This feedback is used to guide future development and prioritize upcoming tasks.
Alignment with Product Vision: The team and stakeholders discuss whether the work aligns with the overall product vision and objectives, ensuring that the project is moving in the right direction.
Product Backlog Refinement: The product backlog is reviewed and updated based on the feedback and new insights gained during the review. This helps set the direction for the next sprint.
Celebration of Achievements: The sprint review is also an opportunity to acknowledge and celebrate the team’s accomplishments and progress.
Collaboration on Next Steps: The group collaborates to determine what should be done next, considering changes in the market, customer needs, or project priorities.
The sprint review is interactive and collaborative, encouraging open discussion and feedback rather than being a formal presentation. It is timeboxed—typically to two hours for a two-week sprint—and is intended to be informal and focused on results.
The sprint review is a working session where the team showcases their work, gathers stakeholder feedback, refines the product backlog, and aligns on the next steps—all while celebrating progress and fostering transparency.
Instructions:
Based on a Sprint Goal and output, perform a Sprint review of what you've finished for a particular sprint.
Here are more details about performing a Sprint Review.