The Most Underrated Advantage of Short Sprints - Mike Cohn
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
-
Narrado por:
-
De:
The Most Underrated Advantage of Short Sprints - Mike Cohn
A recent Gallup survey found that 80% of employees who received meaningful feedback in the past week are engaged at work.
For comparison, Gallup’s overall engagement numbers are often around 30%.
That’s a striking gap.
It suggests something many leaders overlook: performance may depend less on changing team structure and more on improving feedback inside the structure you already have.
When results lag, organizations often reach for the org chart. They reorganize teams, redraw reporting lines, or debate how many teams a coach or Scrum Master should work with.
Sometimes those changes help. But they rarely go far if feedback is infrequent, unclear, or missing altogether.
Feedback isn’t just a management technique. It’s a strategic advantage.
And agile teams have been building that advantage into the way they work for years.
When people talk about one- or two-week sprints, they usually focus on speed.
- “We need to move faster.”
- “We need more output.”
- “We need shorter release cycles.”
But speed isn’t the real advantage of short sprints.
The advantage is shortening the time between action and learning.
A sprint isn’t a delivery cycle. It’s a feedback cycle.
Each sprint gives a team a natural point to stop and ask:
- Did we build the right thing?
- Did we misunderstand the need?
- Are we still aligned with stakeholders?
- Are we learning what we hoped to learn?
The shorter the sprint, the shorter the gap between assumption and validation.
That’s not about velocity. That’s about reducing risk.
Early Scrum teams often worked like this:
Sprint, sprint, sprint… then release.
That pattern made sense at the time in the 1990s and early 2000s. It was a huge improvement over what had come before. But it meant some feedback arrived in a big, delayed batch after the release.
Over time, many teams evolved to:
Sprint, release, sprint, release.
And today, many modern teams have gone further still. They release whenever it makes sense—sometimes multiple times per sprint, sometimes many times per day.
In other words, modern agile teams have largely decoupled sprints from releases.
So if sprints aren’t primarily about shipping anymore, what are they for?
Sprints provide a reliable cadence for feedback and alignment—even when delivery happens continuously.
Many organizations treat the Sprint Review as a demo.
It’s not.
It’s where reality gets a vote.
The Sprint Review is where the team inspects what was built with the people who care about it, and adjusts course based on what they learn.
When that meeting becomes optional, rushed, or performative, you don’t just lose a ceremony. You lose your learning loop. And you start optimizing for finishing work instead of finishing the right work.
If weekly feedback really is one of the biggest drivers of engagement and performance—as Gallup’s numbers suggest—then the Sprint Review isn’t overhead. It’s how you reduce rework, prevent expensive surprises, and stay aligned with what actually matters.
Of course, simply running one-week sprints doesn’t guarantee meaningful feedback.
Stakeholders can skip reviews.
Teams can ignore input.
The conversation can stay superficial.
Short cycles create the opportunity for feedback. Leaders decide whether to use it.
That’s where the advantage lives.
If you’re running one- or two-week sprints, ask yourself:
Are we using sprints as delivery deadlines—or as learning deadlines?
Because the real power of agile isn’t producing more every two weeks.
It’s learning more every two weeks.
And that’s a competitive advantage that will help you succeed with agile,
How to connect with AgileDad:
- [website] https://www.agiledad.com/
- [instagram] https://www.instagram.com/agile_coach/
- [facebook] https://www.facebook.com/RealAgileDad/
- [Linkedin] https://www.linkedin.com/in/leehenson/