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Agile, Scrum and the nonsense about architects

17.11.2013 | 3 minutes of reading time

Let me start this post with a bit of ranting: I am so tired to hear or read the same nonsense over and over again usually emitted by people obviously hardly knowing what they are talking about.

What am I ranting about? It is about this stupid argument that Agile does not need an architect because Scrum does not know about this role. Aaaaaaaarrrrgh, could scream about that nonsense!

Do not get me wrong: I do not think that you always need an explicit architect — not at all. There might be reasons to have an architect on your project, there might be reasons not to have one. That is not the point.

It is the mindless argumentation usually used that annoys me. It goes like this: “Scrum does not define a role Architect and therefore an architect is not needed in an agile IT project. Case closed. Period.”

I hoped we left this mindless argumentation behind us several years ago but I still hear this crap over and over again — usually either by some blindfold agile disciples trying to justify their point of view this way or by some agile deniers trying to start a rant right after this claim.

I just read it a few days ago again in a session abstract of a big, well-known German conference. And it was not meant as a joke. The author meant it absolutely serious. Aaaaaaaarrrrgh again!

Okay, I guess most of you know already what is wrong about this argumentation. For those of you who are not completely sure, let us step back and think about Scrum a bit:

First of all Scrum is not an equivalent for Agile but just a tiny process framework with lots of gaps and missing bits and pieces (at least if Scrum is all you have to run an IT project). There is a lot more to Agile than just Scrum. Thus, even if Scrum does not provide for an architect it does not mean at all that Agile does not need an architect. But that is not the most important point.

The most important point is: Scrum is IT-agnostic!

Scrum does not know anything about IT!

Or as Jeff Sutherland once told us in my original Scrum Master training several years ago: “You can use Scrum to organize your weekend.” And even though you partner is not provided as an explicit Scrum role you should better not exclude her or him from our weekend organization if you care about your relation … 😉

Actually, Scrum was not developed in the IT domain at all. Scrum’s origins are the design and development of consumer goods. Much later it became generalized and rolled out to other domains, as the IT domain.

And if you look really carefully, you will figure out that Scrum also does not define roles as Requirements Engineer or Tester. Scrum even does not define a role Developer!

There is just a Team and all Scrum tells us about that team is that you better make sure all skills you need to get the job done should be available in the team.

Utilizing the mindless argumentation from the beginning I am really curious how anyone will get an IT project done without developers. Maybe Chuck Norris can do, but not the rest of us … 😉

Conclusion: The fact that Scrum does not mention an architect role does not give any evidence if this role is needed or not in an IT project. Scrum does not mention any IT-specific role because it is IT-agnostic.

Thus, please let us stop using this stupid argumentation for good. And if you should ever see someone using this argumentation again please tell him or her that he or she is talking crap. Let us all get rid of that nonsense for good.

Again, there might be good reasons why you need or do not need an architect in your project but that is a different story … a much more interesting story!

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