Chapter 01
The Core Philosophy
Traditional strategic planning operates on annual cycles: goals are set in October, budgets locked in December, and progress reviewed a year later. The world doesn't wait. Sprint-based methodology replaces this waterfall logic with a cadence of short, focused execution cycles — typically two weeks — that force clarity, surface obstacles early, and enable rapid course correction.
Originally developed in software engineering (Scrum, XP, Kanban), agile sprints have been successfully adapted to marketing transformations, M&A integrations, product launches, cost reduction programs, and organizational redesigns. The underlying principle is universal: small, committed teams delivering tangible outcomes in short, repeatable cycles outperform large, committee-driven programs working toward distant milestones.
Core Insight
A sprint is not a shortened project plan. It is a hypothesis: "In two weeks, this team can deliver this specific outcome." The retrospective tests whether the hypothesis was correct — and why.
Why Sprints Beat Annual Planning Cycles
Annual plans suffer from three structural failures. First, assumption drift: market conditions, competitive dynamics, and internal capabilities change faster than plans can adapt. Second, accountability diffusion: when deadlines are distant, ownership is unclear. Third, learning delay: failures surface too late to course-correct without major sunk cost. Sprints compress all three timelines to weeks, not months.
TraditionalAnnual Planning → Quarterly Review → Annual Retrospective
→
Sprint-Based2-Week Cycle → Demo → Retro → Next Sprint
→
Outcome26× faster learning loops per year
Chapter 02
Key Roles & Responsibilities
Sprint teams are small by design — typically 4 to 8 people. Three distinct roles anchor the model. In non-IT contexts, role titles can be adapted, but the functions must be preserved.
🎯Initiative Owner
Equivalent to the Product Owner. Owns the backlog, defines priorities, accepts or rejects deliverables. Key accountability: what gets built and why.
🔧Sprint Facilitator
Equivalent to the Scrum Master. Runs ceremonies, removes blockers, protects the team from scope creep. Does not manage the team — enables their effectiveness.
⚙️Delivery Team
Cross-functional executors. Self-organizing. Commits to sprint goals collectively, not individually. In strategy initiatives: analysts, operations, finance, communications.
Adaptation for Non-IT Teams
In family businesses or corporate functions, the Sprint Facilitator role is often unfamiliar. Assign it to a detail-oriented, process-minded team member — not the most senior person. Seniority belongs with the Initiative Owner; process discipline belongs with the Facilitator.
Chapter 03
The Sprint Cycle
A standard two-week sprint follows a predictable rhythm. Predictability is a feature, not a constraint — it allows the organisation to plan around the team's cadence and reduces coordination overhead.
01Sprint PlanningDay 1 · 2–3h
02Daily Stand-upsDays 2–9 · 15 min/day
03Mid-Sprint CheckDay 5–6 · 30 min
04Sprint ReviewDay 10 · 1–2h
05RetrospectiveDay 10 · 1h
The Two-Week Cadence in Practice
Week 1
PLANNING
Goal setting, backlog grooming, task assignment
STAND-UP
15-min sync
STAND-UP
15-min sync
STAND-UP
15-min sync
MID-SPRINT
Blocker review, scope check
Week 2
STAND-UP
15-min sync
STAND-UP
15-min sync
STAND-UP
15-min sync
STAND-UP
15-min sync
REVIEW + RETRO
Demo outcomes, reflect, plan next sprint
Chapter 04
Ceremonies & Rituals
Ceremonies are not bureaucracy — they are the mechanisms through which the sprint model generates learning, alignment, and accountability. Each has a distinct purpose and should be time-boxed strictly.
| Ceremony | Duration | Purpose | Output |
| Sprint Planning | 2–3 hours | Select backlog items; define Sprint Goal; assign owners; estimate effort | Sprint Backlog + Sprint Goal statement |
| Daily Stand-up | 15 minutes | Surface blockers early; maintain shared awareness; protect focus | Updated task board; identified blockers |
| Mid-Sprint Check | 30 minutes | Assess whether sprint goal is still achievable; reforecast if needed | Adjusted scope (if needed); blocker escalation |
| Sprint Review | 1–2 hours | Demo completed work to stakeholders; gather feedback; update backlog | Accepted deliverables; refined backlog |
| Retrospective | 60 minutes | Inspect the process — what worked, what didn't, what to change | 1–3 process improvements for next sprint |
| Backlog Grooming | 1 hour | Refine, estimate, and re-prioritize upcoming backlog items; held mid-sprint | Ready-to-pull items for next sprint planning |
Facilitation Tip
Start stand-ups by walking the task board right-to-left — from "Done" to "In Progress" to "Backlog." This keeps attention on flow and completion, not activity. Teams that walk right-to-left focus on whether work is finishing; teams that walk left-to-right focus on how busy they are.
Chapter 05
Backlog & Prioritization
The initiative backlog is the master list of all work items required to achieve the strategic objective. It is not a project plan — it is a dynamic, living list, continuously refined as new information emerges.
Writing Good Backlog Items
In strategic initiatives, backlog items should be written as outcomes, not activities. The focus must always be on what will be delivered, not what will be done.
Example — Strategic Backlog Item
Weak: "Analyse competitor pricing." (Activity — ambiguous completion condition.)
Strong: "Deliver a pricing benchmarking report covering our top 5 competitors across 3 SKU categories, with a recommendation on whether to reprice Q3 volume products — reviewed and accepted by the CMO." (Outcome — clear Definition of Done.)
Prioritization Frameworks
MoSCoW Method
- Must Have — Non-negotiable. Sprint fails without it.
- Should Have — High value, important but not critical for sprint goal.
- Could Have — Nice-to-have; pulled in only if capacity exists.
- Won't Have — Explicitly out-of-scope this sprint.
WSJF (Weighted Shortest Job First)
More rigorous: score each item on business value + time criticality + risk reduction divided by job size. Items with the highest ratio get prioritised. Prevents teams from always picking easy tasks over high-value-but-hard ones.
Definition of Done (DoD)
Every sprint must have an explicit, team-agreed Definition of Done. Without it, "done" means different things to different people — the most common source of sprint failure.
Chapter 06
Running Your First Sprint
A practical step-by-step guide for launching a first sprint on a strategic initiative — whether a transformation program, an M&A integration workstream, or a new business initiative.
Pre-Sprint Preparation (Week −1)
- Define the strategic initiative scope and 3-month horizon goal
- Identify and confirm the three roles: Initiative Owner, Facilitator, Delivery Team
- Create the initial backlog — aim for 20–40 items at launch
- Set up a shared task board (physical whiteboard or digital: Jira, Trello, Notion, Miro)
- Define the sprint cadence and lock recurring ceremony slots in calendars
- Agree on the Definition of Done with the full team
Sprint Planning Session
- Initiative Owner presents top backlog items and explains business priority
- Team estimates effort for each item (T-shirt sizing: S/M/L/XL works for non-tech teams)
- Team commits to a Sprint Goal — one sentence describing what success looks like in two weeks
- Tasks are assigned with single owners (not groups)
- Sprint Backlog is locked — no new items added mid-sprint without removing something
Sprint Goal Example
"By Friday the 20th, we will have a fully validated go-to-market pricing model for Product Line A, reviewed by Finance and Sales leadership, with a decision on Q3 pricing ready to communicate."
During the Sprint
- Run daily stand-ups at the same time, same place — even when brief
- The Facilitator updates the task board after every stand-up
- Blockers are escalated within 24 hours — never carried for more than one day
- Initiative Owner remains available for quick decisions — delays kill sprint momentum
- No scope additions without explicit trade-offs (add one task, remove one task)
Sprint Review & Retrospective
- Demo completed work — show artefacts, not status slides
- Initiative Owner formally accepts or rejects each deliverable against the DoD
- Unfinished work returns to backlog — no automatic carry-over
- Retrospective: each person writes 3 sticky notes — "What worked," "What didn't," "What to try"
- Team selects 1–3 process improvements to implement in the very next sprint
Chapter 07
Metrics & KPIs
Sprint-based teams should track both process health metrics and strategic outcome metrics. The two are different and both matter.
| Metric | What It Measures | Target |
| Sprint Velocity | Story points or tasks completed per sprint | Stable or growing over 4+ sprints |
| Sprint Goal Achievement Rate | % of sprints where the Sprint Goal was fully met | > 70% (some failure is healthy) |
| Blocker Resolution Time | Average hours from blocker raised to blocker resolved | < 24 hours |
| Backlog Burndown | Rate at which initiative backlog is completing over time | Consistent downward trend |
| Scope Creep Rate | % of tasks added mid-sprint vs. planned at sprint start | < 10% of sprint volume |
| Retrospective Action Completion | % of retro commitments implemented in the following sprint | > 80% |
"Velocity is not a productivity metric — it is a predictability metric. Teams that consistently deliver 70% of what they plan are more valuable than teams that promise 100% and deliver 60%."
Agile Practice Principle
Chapter 08
Common Pitfalls
Most sprint failures in non-IT contexts follow predictable patterns. Recognising them early allows course correction before the methodology loses organisational credibility.
⚠ Mini-Waterfall
Treating sprints as two-week phases of a traditional plan with no feedback loop. Fix: ensure each sprint delivers a standalone outcome, not a "phase."
⚠ Sprint Goal Vacuum
Running sprints without a Sprint Goal — just a list of tasks. Fix: never start a sprint without a single-sentence goal, agreed by all.
⚠ Absent Initiative Owner
The owner delegates attendance at reviews and planning. Teams ship the wrong things. Fix: Owner attendance at Planning and Review is non-negotiable.
⚠ Retros Without Action
Teams identify problems every retro but never implement changes. Fix: assign a single owner to each retro action item, with a next-sprint delivery date.
⚠ Scope Creep Mid-Sprint
Stakeholders add tasks directly to the team, bypassing the backlog. Fix: all new requests go to the backlog first; the Facilitator protects the team.
⚠ Velocity Obsession
Management treats velocity as a KPI to maximise, encouraging teams to inflate estimates. Fix: velocity is a planning tool, never a performance target.
Adapting for Mature Organisations
In established corporate or family business contexts, sprint methodology often meets resistance rooted in three concerns: the perception that "agile" means chaotic, loss of executive control, and incompatibility with existing governance structures. Address each directly: sprints increase visibility through frequent reviews; governance checkpoints can align to sprint review cadences; and the methodology complements strategy, not replaces it.
Chapter 09
Milestone Mapping & External Dependencies
Before the first sprint begins, the team needs more than a backlog. It needs a shared map of where the initiative is going and what must be true at each major waypoint. Without this map, sprint goals are arbitrary two-week chunks of activity. With it, every sprint has a reason to exist.
The Three-Level Hierarchy
A well-structured sprint programme operates at three levels simultaneously. The strategic outcome is the destination — the thing the initiative exists to achieve. It doesn't change sprint to sprint. Milestones are the major state changes that must occur for the outcome to be reachable — each one represents an irreversible step forward. Sprint goals are the specific work required to reach the next milestone. This hierarchy gives every sprint goal its logic: not "we decided to do this for two weeks" but "this is what the next milestone requires from us."
Strategic OutcomeThe destination. Fixed. Owned by the Initiative Owner.
→
MilestonesMajor state changes. Irreversible. Gate subsequent work.
→
Sprint GoalsTwo-week commitments. Deliver evidence or output needed to reach next milestone.
Internal vs External Milestones
This is one of the most important distinctions in strategic initiative management — and one that is almost never made explicit. Internal milestones are fully within the team's control: cost model completed, supplier shortlist confirmed, prototype produced, board memo submitted. The team can commit to these, plan sprints around them, and be held accountable for delivering them.
External milestones are gated by a third party whose timeline you do not control: a retailer confirms a listing, a regulator approves a certification, a partner signs a contract, a customer makes a purchase decision. You can do everything right and still wait months. Sprint methodology governs the former, not the latter.
Internal Milestone — example
"Board approves $220k capex for production line modification." The team produces the memo, builds the financial model, runs the board meeting. Fully controllable.
External Milestone — example
"QuickStop category committee confirms retail listing." QuickStop's committee meets quarterly. Their decision process is internal to them. The team can prepare, present, follow up — but cannot control the outcome or its timing.
The risk of conflating them
If a sprint goal is written against an external milestone, the team can execute flawlessly and still "fail" the sprint. This destroys morale, distorts metrics, and teaches teams to set goals they can game rather than goals that matter.
The correct approach
Write sprint goals only against internal milestones. Manage external milestones through Watch Items — tracked every sprint, never blocking the sprint goal, with a clear next action owned by one person.
Watch Items — Managing Long External Dependencies
A Watch Item is a special backlog task type for work that spans many sprints because its completion depends on an external party. It is always In Progress, never Done until the external decision arrives, and never drives the sprint goal. It has three characteristics that distinguish it from a regular task.
- Single named owner — one person is responsible for all contact, follow-up, and escalation. The team is never collectively responsible for a watch item.
- Clear next action — at every stand-up, the owner states not just a status but a specific next action and its date. "Waiting to hear back" is not acceptable. "Following up with their buyer on Thursday, then escalating to their category director if no response by Friday" is.
- Parallel work continues — while the external party deliberates, the team progresses all other sprint work. The watch item does not pause the programme.
Watch Item on the Board
Watch Items live in a separate section of the task board — visually distinct from the sprint backlog. They are updated at every stand-up but never counted in sprint velocity. They appear in the sprint review as status updates, not as deliverables. A watch item moves to Done only when the external party acts — at which point it often triggers a new internal task (e.g., "QuickStop listing confirmed → draft commercial terms within 5 days").
When an External Milestone is a Hard Gate
Sometimes an external milestone is not just slow — it is a prerequisite for subsequent internal work. You cannot finalise packaging design without the retailer's shelf specifications. You cannot confirm production volumes without a signed purchase order. In these cases the dependency must be made explicit in the sprint programme map, and the team needs a contingency plan for each scenario.
The practical approach is to run two parallel planning tracks. The optimistic track assumes the external milestone arrives on time and plans the subsequent internal sprints accordingly. The contingency track identifies which internal work can proceed on reasonable assumptions — and explicitly flags what would need to change if the assumptions prove wrong. This is not pessimism; it is the difference between a team that is surprised by delays and a team that has already decided how to respond to them.
Sprint Programme Map — recommended format
One page. Strategic outcome at top. Milestones in sequence below — colour-coded internal (solid border) vs external (dashed border). Sprints mapped under each internal milestone. Watch items shown as horizontal bars spanning multiple sprints, with an owner name. Hard gates shown as vertical lines — nothing to the right proceeds until the gate is passed. Review this map at every sprint planning session and update it as reality changes.
Part I Complete · Part II — Live Simulation
Situation Brief
Harvest Foods — Project Leaf
Harvest Foods is a family-owned family-owned snacks company — 120 employees, approximately $80M revenue — with a strong position in conventional biscuits and crackers. Claire, the founder's daughter, is leading a strategic initiative to launch a premium organic snack line called Leaf, targeting the growing health-conscious retail segment. The board has allocated an exploratory budget. No decision on production investment has been made yet.
Horizon Goal (3 months)
First commercial sale of a Leaf product in at least one retail chain. Decision on production capex by end of Month 2.
Definition of Done
A deliverable is Done when analysis is complete, reviewed by the Initiative Owner, and a clear next action or decision is recorded.
Tools
Physical task board. Shared Google Drive folder. No project management software — by design, to reduce friction at this stage.
Sprint Cadence
Two-week sprints. Planning on Monday morning. Stand-ups Tue–Thu at 09:00 (later 10:00 — see Sprint 1 Retro). Mid-check end of Week 1. Review + Retro end of Week 2.
The Team
Initiative Owner
Claire
Founder's daughter and project sponsor. Sets priorities, accepts deliverables, makes go/no-go calls.
Sprint Facilitator
Marcus
Runs ceremonies, removes blockers, protects sprint scope. Detail-oriented; not the most senior person in the room.
Marketing Lead
Sophie
Consumer insights, competitor analysis. Tends to overcommit — a pattern she recognises and corrects across Sprint 1.
Operations Lead
Owen
Supplier relationships, production feasibility. Initially the most sceptical of the methodology.
Finance Lead
Thomas
Financial modelling, cost analysis. Precise, surfaces dependencies early, co-authors the board memo in Sprint 2.
Sales Lead
Eva
Retail account relationships. Proactive — often delivers more than asked and unblocks herself without waiting.
Sprint 1 · Weeks 1–2
Validate the Commercial Case
Sprint Goal
Have a pricing model, a competitor benchmark, and a supplier shortlist ready — so Claire can make a go/no-go decision on moving into prototype development by Friday Week 2.
The first sprint starts from nothing: no data, no confirmed suppliers, no retail intelligence beyond intuition. The goal is purely analytical — build the evidence needed for one specific decision.
Sprint 1 Backlog
| # | Task | Owner | Priority | Size | Outcome |
| S1-01 | Competitor analysis — top organic snack brands in retail market: pricing, SKU range, shelf positioning | Sophie | Must | M | ✓ Done |
| S1-02 | Cost model — ingredient + packaging estimate for 3 product concepts | Thomas | Must | L | ~ Partial (scoped) |
| S1-03 | Supplier shortlist — 3 certified organic ingredient suppliers, preliminary quotes | Owen | Must | M | ✓ Done |
| S1-04 | Retail channel map — which chains carry organic lines, typical margin expectations | Eva | Must | S | ✓ Done |
| S1-05 | Brief product development agency on top 2 concepts | Claire | Should | S | ✓ Done |
| S1-06 | Consumer survey — 20 interviews on premium snack purchase drivers | Sophie | Could | L | Dropped |
What to watch for
This is the team's first encounter with the methodology. Watch how scepticism gets handled — Owen's challenge in the first five minutes sets the tone for the whole programme. Notice also how the sprint goal isn't written by Marcus alone: the team negotiates it into one sentence together. And watch Thomas flag a dependency before it becomes a blocker. That single moment of early honesty saves the sprint.
Sprint Planning
Monday · 09:00 · 2h 20min
—The team gathers in the main conference room. Marcus has set up the physical task board — three columns: Backlog, In Progress, Done. Six stacks of sticky notes, one colour per person.
ClaireGood morning. I want to say why we're doing this differently. We've spent two years talking about an organic line. Today we stop talking and start building — in two-week cycles. Marcus facilitates. I'm the Initiative Owner — I set priorities, I accept deliverables, but I don't manage your day-to-day work. Questions before we start?
OwenI've heard "agile" before. Usually means the IT team does whatever they want and calls it flexibility. How is this different?
MarcusFair challenge. The difference is commitment. At the start of each sprint we all agree on exactly what gets done. We don't add things mid-sprint without removing something else. And every two weeks Claire reviews what we actually delivered — not what we plan to deliver. It's more discipline than most IT teams practice, not less.
OwenOkay. I can work with that.
ClaireSix items on the backlog. The first four are must-haves — without them I can't make the go/no-go call on prototyping. Item five I'd like but it won't block the decision. Item six, Sophie's consumer survey: too large for this sprint.
SophieI understand dropping the survey — but can we do five structured calls? I know three people who bought organic snacks last month. It would take me a day.
MarcusSophie, what's your load with S1-01, the competitor analysis?
SophieThree to four days realistically. I could fit calls in Week 2.
ClaireAdd it as a Could Have, clearly separate from the competitor analysis. S1-01 comes first — if it slips, the interviews don't happen. Agreed?
ThomasS1-02 depends on S1-03. If Owen's supplier quotes come in late in Week 2, I won't have time for a proper model. I can produce a range estimate with public market data, but precise numbers need actual quotes.
OwenI can reach out today. But certified organic suppliers move slowly — getting three responses in ten days is optimistic. I have a broker contact in the south who might speed this up.
MarcusDependency risk noted on the board. Owen — contact all three by Wednesday, flag by Thursday's stand-up if any are non-responsive. That gives Thomas time to pivot to public data if needed.
MarcusSprint Goal — let's write it together. One sentence that makes this sprint a success.
Claire"By Friday the 14th, Claire has the competitor benchmark, the supplier shortlist, and a cost range that allows her to decide whether to fund prototype development — yes or no." That's the test.
—The team moves tasks to the Backlog column. Marcus photographs the board. Sprint begins.
Sprint 1 · Days 3 & 5
Daily Stand-ups
Stand-ups run at 09:00, fifteen minutes maximum, walking the board right-to-left. Day 3 shows the team in rhythm. Day 5 is when a blocker forces a live scope decision.
What to watch for
Day 3 demonstrates what a healthy stand-up feels like — short, directional, no discussion, immediate escalation of a soft risk. Owen flags GreenAgri's silence before it becomes a blocker; Marcus acts on it in the same breath. Day 5 is more instructive: a blocker arrives, but the team doesn't panic or defer. Claire makes a scope decision in under three minutes. The stand-up runs over by three minutes — that's the cost of a live decision, and it's worth it.
Daily Stand-up
Stand-up — Day 3 (Wednesday)
Wednesday · 09:00 · 12 minutes
—Two tasks In Progress. Nothing in Done yet. Marcus walks the board right-to-left.
MarcusQuick round — yesterday / today / blockers. Sophie?
SophieYesterday: mapped the retail shelf in FreshCo's organic section, pulled Nielsen data from 2024. Today: finishing the SKU range analysis for the top three brands. No blockers.
OwenYesterday: sent emails to all three suppliers plus the broker. Two replied. The third — GreenAgri Inc. — hasn't responded. Today: sending the inquiry form to the second supplier, scheduling the Thursday call. The BioAgri silence might be a blocker — flagging early.
MarcusGood flag. If BioAgri doesn't reply by tomorrow, activate backup contacts immediately — don't wait for stand-up.
ThomasYesterday: built the cost model skeleton — three sheets, one per concept, using public commodity prices. Today: finalising packaging cost estimates independently. Waiting on Owen's quotes for ingredient rows. Soft dependency, no hard blocker yet.
EvaYesterday: reached QuickStop's category manager. Organic snacks under $5 are growing 30% year-on-year in their data. Today: writing up the channel map — draft by end of day.
ClaireYesterday: kicked off the agency brief with two concepts. Today: reviewing their initial questions. No blockers.
MarcusBoard updated. Everything on track. Twelve minutes. Good work.
Daily Stand-up
Stand-up — Day 5 (Friday · pre Mid-Check)
Friday · 09:00 · 18 minutes
—Eva's channel map is in Done. Sophie's competitor analysis is 70% complete. Thomas's cost model is stalled. BioAgri has confirmed they're on summer shutdown. This stand-up runs slightly over time.
OwenBioAgri confirmed yesterday they're on summer shutdown — back in three weeks. I've activated both broker contacts. One responded this morning: CertOrganic LLC They can do a preliminary quote call next Tuesday.
ThomasBlocker
The granola bar cost model relies on oat and honey pricing. Without an organic certified quote, I'm working with a ±40% range — too wide to be useful for Claire's decision.
ClaireThomas — which concepts can you model precisely without the quotes?
ThomasRice crackers. Rice flour pricing is transparent in the commodity market — I can get to ±15% without organic quotes. Granola bar stays wide.
ClaireThen scope the cost model: rice cracker as primary with tight numbers, granola bar as secondary with a range. That's still decision-quality output. Marcus — update the Definition of Done for S1-02.
MarcusDone on the board. "Cost model Done = rice cracker at ±15% precision, granola bar as indicative range, reviewed and accepted by Claire." Blocker surfaced, scope adjusted, still on track. Mid-check in thirty minutes.
Sprint 1 · End of Week 1
Mid-Sprint Check
A thirty-minute structured review of sprint health. The key question is always the same: is the Sprint Goal still achievable? If not, what is the minimum adjustment required?
What to watch for
Mid-checks reveal the gap between what was planned and what is actually happening — and force a deliberate response. Watch how Marcus frames the question: not "is everything on track?" but "can Claire make the go/no-go call by Friday with what we'll have?" That reframe keeps the team focused on the goal, not on task completion for its own sake. Also notice Eva surfacing the QuickStop September window — a piece of intelligence she delivers to the backlog immediately, without letting it distract from the current sprint.
Mid-Sprint Check
Sprint 1 — Mid-Sprint Review
Friday · 09:30 · 28 minutes
MarcusBoard status: S1-04 Done. S1-01 In Progress at 70%. S1-02 scoped down. S1-03 In Progress, one supplier replaced. S1-05 Not Started. S1-06 Dropped. Sprint Goal check: can Claire make the go/no-go call by Friday with what we'll have?
ClaireIf S1-02 delivers what we agreed — rice cracker tight, granola indicative — yes. I don't need perfect numbers. Eva's channel map already tells me QuickStop is interested in organic snacks under $5. That's directional.
EvaThe QuickStop category manager mentioned a September review slot. If we have samples, we could present. Not in this sprint — flagging for the backlog.
MarcusWrite it on a sticky and put it in the backlog pile. We'll decide in sprint planning whether it belongs in Sprint 2. Don't let it distract from this week's work.
SophieCapacity issue: I underestimated the competitor analysis. The German brands have complex multi-country pricing. I want to drop them and focus on domestic market players only. Saves a day, keeps the work relevant.
ClaireAgreed. German positioning doesn't translate directly to local price sensitivity. Drop them — update the task definition.
MarcusGood scope adjustment — that's exactly what mid-checks are for. Three active risks remain: CertOrganic quote timing, Sophie's bandwidth in Week 2, and whether Claire has two hours available Friday afternoon to accept deliverables formally. Claire?
Sprint 1 · End of Week 2
Sprint Review
The sprint review is a demo, not a status update. The team shows completed work; the Initiative Owner formally accepts or rejects each deliverable against the Definition of Done.
What to watch for
Henry's unannounced arrival is the moment the methodology is tested in front of power. Watch how Marcus handles it — he doesn't change the format or soften the framing for the founder's benefit. The review proceeds exactly as it would without him. Also watch Claire's acceptance language: she doesn't say "good job" — she says "Accepted" or "Accepted with note," and states why. That precision matters. And listen to Henry's closing remark: he doesn't praise the methodology — he just notes what two weeks produced. That's the only endorsement that counts.
Day 8 Stand-up — Summary
CertOrganic call happened Monday. Quotes: organic rice flour at $4.20/kg certified, minimum order 500kg. Thomas updated the model: rice cracker cost at scale — $1.05–$1.18 per unit. At $3.80–$4.50 retail price, the gate margin lands at 38–42%. Sophie's analysis is Done, scoped to domestic brands. The board is shifting toward Done.
Sprint Review
Sprint 1 — Sprint Review
Friday · 14:00 · 75 minutes
—Henry, the founder, joins unexpectedly and sits at the back. This is the first time the team presents completed work rather than plans.
MarcusWelcome to the Sprint 1 Review. We show what we actually built, not what we planned to build. Claire formally accepts or declines each deliverable. Henry, you're welcome to observe — feedback is helpful after the formal review. Let's start with S1-04.
EvaThree chains to target first. QuickStop: highest organic growth, open to conversations, September review window. FreshCo: premium shelf developed, 35–40% margin requirement, wants exclusivity early. ValueMart: highest volume, but requires minimum 20,000 units per SKU per month. Recommendation: QuickStop for launch, FreshCo second, ValueMart when we have production scale.
ClaireAccepted
S1-04: Done. The QuickStop September window is important — that's our target slot. Eva, confirm Monday whether it's still available.
SophieS1-01 — competitor analysis. Key finding: the $4.20–$4.80 price band is underdeveloped. NatureBite clusters below it, CleanLeaf above it. At $4.50 for a 30g format, we're in a gap nobody is owning. NatureBite's packaging is also getting consumer criticism for being "too industrial" — opportunity for us on naturalness.
ClaireAccepted
S1-01: Done. The pricing gap confirms the rice cracker concept. The packaging observation goes into the agency brief.
OwenS1-03: three certified suppliers. CertOrganic and GreenSource with confirmed quotes. PureNatura Inc. has EU organic and Bio Suisse — slightly premium, but they specifically work with branded premium products.
ClaireAccepted
S1-03: Done. The Bio Suisse angle from PureNatura is worth exploring for premium positioning.
ThomasS1-02: rice cracker — $1.05 cost, $4.50 retail target, 42% gate margin. Granola bar wider: $1.30–$1.80 cost. At $4.80 retail, granola margins are thinner. My recommendation: rice cracker is the stronger first product financially.
ClaireAccepted — with note
S1-02: Done for rice cracker, indicative for granola. The 42% gate margin is above our existing product average — this genuinely surprised me. Sprint Goal achieved. I am authorising prototype development.
HenryI've been sceptical of this whole "sprint" idea. But two weeks ago we had nothing but an idea. Today you're showing me a pricing gap, a margin model, and a distribution window. I've been in this business thirty years and we usually spend six months deciding something like this. Carry on.
Sprint 1 · Retrospective
What Worked. What Didn't. What to Change.
The retrospective inspects the process, not the output. Six team members write sticky notes — green for what worked, red for what didn't, blue for what to try — then vote on the top three improvements to implement immediately in Sprint 2.
What to watch for
Two things make this retrospective work. First, Sophie's public admission — she knew the German brands were too much and said yes anyway. Naming it out loud in front of the team creates real accountability; a private note to Marcus would not. Second, watch how the three retro commitments are written: each has a specific owner, a specific action, and a specific date. "We should communicate better" produces nothing. "Owen contacts suppliers 3 days before sprint starts" produces behaviour change. Compare these commitments to Sprint 2 planning and verify whether they were actually implemented.
Retrospective
Sprint 1 — Retrospective
Friday · 15:30 · 55 minutes
Mid-sprint scope adjustment on the cost model saved us from a failed sprint
Surfacing the BioAgri blocker on Day 3 gave us time to pivot to CertOrganic
Claire's quick decisions in stand-ups — no waiting 24 hours for answers
Walking the board right-to-left kept focus on completing work, not starting new things
Eva's QuickStop call was proactive — more than we asked for
09:00 stand-up too early — Claire arrived at 09:05–09:10 every day
Supplier outreach should have started before the sprint — the dependency was predictable
Sophie included German brands she knew were too much, but didn't say so in planning
Task board shows no dependencies — Thomas's blocker wasn't visible until stand-up
S1-05 (agency brief) was done last — almost missed the review window
Move stand-ups to 10:00
Pre-sprint prep: Owen contacts suppliers 3 days before sprint starts
Add dependency arrows to the physical board — red string between blocked tasks
Sophie commits only to what she's confident in — no optimistic estimates
Sprint 2: consumer validation early in the sprint, not last
SophieI want to add one personal note. I knew the German brand research was too much, but I said yes anyway. I'll be more honest in planning next time. Saying it out loud because I think it'll make me actually do it.
MarcusThat's exactly what retrospectives are for. Thank you, Sophie. Stand-ups move to 10:00 from Monday. Owen — supplier contacts by Wednesday. I'll add dependency arrows before next planning.
Sprint 2 Process Commitments
ClaireStand-ups move to 10:00 — calendar updated by MondayImmediate
OwenContact all suppliers needing quotes 3 days before Sprint 2 Planning — so quotes arrive mid-sprint at the latestWed this week
MarcusAdd dependency arrows to the physical board — red string between blocked tasksBefore S2 Planning
Sprint 1 Complete · Sprint 2 Begins
Sprint 2 · Weeks 3–4
Build the Go/No-Go Case
Sprint Goal
Produce a decision-quality investment memo for the Leaf rice cracker — validated cost, consumer-tested concept, at least one retail account signal — so the board can authorise capex on Friday.
Sprint 2 has a hard external deadline: Henry's board presentation is booked for Friday the 28th. The output is a board-ready investment case. This sprint also demonstrates all three of Sprint 1's retro commitments in action from Day 1.
What to watch for
Start by checking the board: dependency arrows are already drawn in red string — a retro commitment from Sprint 1, implemented before the first word of planning. Owen started supplier contact three days ago — another retro commitment, also implemented. The retrospective is only as valuable as the follow-through. This planning session shows a team that took its own commitments seriously. Also notice how the consumer interview finding — black sesame — arrives mid-sprint and changes the product concept. The team absorbs it without derailing the sprint goal.
| # | Task | Owner | Priority | Size | Outcome |
| S2-01 | Finalise cost model with actual supplier quotes — rice cracker primary concept | Thomas + Owen | Must | M | ✓ Done |
| S2-02 | Approach 2 retail accounts (QuickStop + FreshCo) — initial category conversation, gauge interest | Eva | Must | M | ✓ Done (ValueMart swap) |
| S2-03 | Consumer validation — 15 interviews on top 2 product concepts | Sophie | Must | M | ✓ Done — early |
| S2-04 | Draft investment memo — 3-year financial model, capex estimate, scenarios | Claire + Thomas | Must | L | ✓ Done |
| S2-05 | Go/no-go decision framework — 1-page criteria sheet for board | Marcus | Should | S | ✓ Done |
| S2-06 | Food safety pre-assessment on CertOrganic — HACCP compatibility check | Owen | Should | S | ✓ Done |
Sprint Planning
Sprint 2 — Planning Session
Monday · 09:00 · 1h 50min
—The mood is different from Sprint 1. Last sprint's success has given the team confidence. The board already has dependency arrows — red string connecting S2-01 and S2-03 to S2-04. Sprint 2 backlog was pre-groomed Thursday of last week.
ClaireThe board presentation to Henry is booked for Friday the 28th. Hard deadline. "Decision quality" means I can defend every number in that room.
ThomasThe 3-year model is the most complex piece. I'll need Owen's finalised quotes — already coming since he started supplier contact Wednesday. I'll also need Eva's retail margin data to model revenue correctly.
EvaQuickStop wants 30–32%. FreshCo 35–38%. Thomas — use 32% for QuickStop and 36% for FreshCo as working assumptions. I'll update you if reality differs.
ThomasPerfect. That unblocks me completely.
SophieS2-03 — committing to 15 interviews, not 20. I learned from last sprint. I'll do them in Week 1 so findings feed into the memo, not arrive after it. I've already got a WhatsApp group of 25 recent premium snack buyers — recruiting from there.
MarcusThat's the retro improvement working. Dependency arrows on the board: S2-03 and S2-01 both feed S2-04. All inputs must arrive by Tuesday end of day in Week 2. Thomas and Claire — you need three days to write the memo properly.
ClaireThis is the sprint where lateness has real consequences. All inputs by Tuesday end of day — commitment, not preference.
OwenCertOrganic quotes already in hand. GreenSource formal document arriving today. HACCP pre-assessment: call with their quality manager booked for Wednesday Week 1. S2-06 done by Thursday.
—All agree on the Sprint Goal. Sprint 2 begins.
Sprint 2 · Days 13 & 17
Daily Stand-ups
Day 13 features a mid-sprint product insight — the black sesame addition — handled cleanly in under three minutes. Day 17 shows the team in the final push with only one task remaining.
What to watch for
Day 13 contains two important moments running in parallel. Sophie's black sesame finding is a genuine mid-sprint discovery — new information that changes the product. Watch how quickly Claire absorbs it and makes the call: cost check, decision, model update, all in three exchanges. Then watch Eva surface the FreshCo problem in the same breath and propose the ValueMart swap herself. The facilitator isn't solving problems — he's recording decisions the team is already making. By Day 17, the sprint is essentially complete. The stand-up is 13 minutes. That smoothness is the result of Sprint 1's retro working.
Daily Stand-up
Stand-up — Day 13 (Wednesday Week 1)
Wednesday · 10:00 · 16 minutes
—Four tasks In Progress. Sophie has completed 8 of her 15 consumer interviews ahead of schedule — and surfaced an unexpected finding.
SophieOf eight interviews so far, six said unprompted that the rice cracker concept sounds "too plain." But when I described it as a "lightly salted rice cracker with black sesame," all six said they'd try it. Insight The sesame addition changes everything — and it's not in the current concept.
ClaireIs that a significant cost change, Owen?
OwenOrganic black sesame is $18–$22/kg. At 2g per unit, that's 0.04–0.0$5 addition per unit. Marginal.
ClaireDecision
Add black sesame to the primary concept. Thomas — update the cost model. Sophie — include this in your writeup. Owen — does CertOrganic supply organic black sesame?
OwenI'll check today. If not, GreenSource does — I saw sesame in their catalogue. Confirmed by tomorrow's stand-up.
EvaQuickStop's September review still open — we need a product sheet and sample by August 25th. Today: calling FreshCo. Concern — my main contact there is on holiday until next week.
EvaValueMart's contact is available and they're actively growing their organic shelf. I could swap FreshCo for ValueMart this sprint, pick up FreshCo in Sprint 3.
ClaireSwap it. ValueMart at their volume is a stronger signal for the board memo. Do it.
MarcusS2-02 now reads QuickStop + ValueMart. Same intent, one account substituted. Board updated. 10:17 — done.
Daily Stand-up
Stand-up — Day 17 (Wednesday Week 2)
Wednesday · 10:00 · 13 minutes
—Investment memo first draft is with the team. Four tasks are Done. Only S2-05 (decision framework) remains.
EvaValueMart call yesterday. Their buyer was direct: "We need minimum 15,000 units per SKU per month to list. If you can commit, we'll put you in the organic section review in October." I told him we'd confirm after an internal decision.
Thomas15,000 units at $1.05 cost — $15,750/month production cost. Very manageable. I've built the ValueMart scenario into the model already. Changes the Year 2 revenue line positively.
ClaireMemo is in good shape. Two sections need strengthening: the risk section and the go-to-market timeline. Finishing today. Thomas — updated model by 14:00 with the ValueMart scenario.
ThomasIn the shared folder by 13:30.
MarcusS2-05 — done this afternoon. No blockers anywhere. 13 minutes.
Sprint 2 · End of Week 1
Mid-Sprint Check
What to watch for
This mid-check is shorter and calmer than Sprint 1's — the team is better at surfacing issues before they accumulate. The key moment is Marcus's instruction to Claire: block Tuesday for memo review, not Thursday night. That's the Sprint 2 retro commitment in action — external deadlines need a buffer built in, not assumed. Without it, the board presentation would have depended on a document reviewed the night before. Also watch how the QuickStop signal — not an LOI, just a sentence — goes directly into the memo. Eva recognises the difference between a signal and a commitment, and labels it correctly.
Mid-Sprint Check
Sprint 2 — Mid-Sprint Review
Friday · 10:00 · 32 minutes
—S2-03 (consumer interviews) is Done — Sophie finished all 15 on Thursday. S2-06 (HACCP assessment) is Done. S2-01 (cost model) is 90% complete. Two tasks not yet started: S2-04 (investment memo) and S2-05 (decision framework).
ThomasFinancial model finalised today. Three scenarios. Capex estimate: approximately $180,000 — we can reuse the existing conveyor line with modifications. Much lower than initially modelled. Base case: breakeven at month 14, IRR 28%.
Claire28% IRR with 180k capex. Is it defensible?
ThomasConservative assumptions throughout. Stress-tested with 15% lower volume and 10% higher ingredient cost — breakeven slides to month 18, IRR to 19%. Still positive.
SophieTop three consumer findings: first, "black sesame rice cracker" beats plain cracker 12 to 3 on intent to purchase. Second, organic certification matters less than clean label — people want to read the ingredients and understand them. Third, paper packaging strongly preferred over plastic.
ClaireThat's the product story. Clean label, paper packaging, artisanal ingredient story. I can write the memo around that.
EvaQuickStop conversation went well — the category manager said: "Send me a sample and a price list, we'll put it on the September agenda." As close to an LOI signal as you get without a formal process.
ClaireThat sentence goes in the memo verbatim. Sprint Goal is de facto achieved if we land the memo. Four days. Let's do it.
MarcusClaire — block Tuesday evening to review the memo draft. Leaves Wednesday and Thursday for revisions. Don't leave review for Thursday night.
Sprint 2 · End of Week 2
Sprint Review — Board Presentation
The Sprint 2 Review doubles as the board presentation. All six deliverables are in Done. Henry, the CFO, and the Head of Production attend alongside the full team.
What to watch for
The CFO's question about capex confidence is the most important exchange in the room. Watch how Thomas answers it: he doesn't defend the $180k number, he immediately proposes a $220k contingency budget and explains the logic. Intellectual honesty in the boardroom — volunteering the uncertainty before being pressed on it — is what creates credibility. Also watch Owen's answer on the sample timeline: three days after the QuickStop deadline. He doesn't hide it. Eva fills the gap with a plan before Henry can respond. The team covers each other's exposure instinctively.
Sprint Review · Board Meeting
Sprint 2 — Review & Board Decision
Friday · 10:00 · 90 minutes
ClaireFour weeks ago we had nothing but an idea. Today I'm presenting a fully validated business case for the Leaf rice cracker — six deliverables, each produced and validated in our sprint process. Then I'll ask for a decision.
ThomasThe 3-year financial model. Base case: 28% IRR, payback month 14. Capex: $180,000 — below initial estimates because we can adapt the existing line. Downside stress test: 19% IRR. We believe the base case is conservative — QuickStop and ValueMart have both signalled active interest.
EvaTwo retail conversations in two weeks. QuickStop: "Send us a sample and price list — September agenda." ValueMart: minimum 15,000 units per month, October review slot available. Not formal LOIs — but as close as you get at this stage without a product to show.
SophieConsumer validation: 15 interviews. Black sesame rice cracker beats plain 12 to 3 on purchase intent. Clean label preference over certification. Paper packaging strongly preferred. The product story: "Three ingredients. One cracker. Made to be read."
CFOThomas — the $180,000 capex is notably lower than I'd assumed. Confidence level?
ThomasPreliminary quote from our existing equipment vendor — ±20% at this stage. We recommend approving $220,000 to include contingency. If detailed engineering comes back lower, the surplus stays in reserve.
CFO$220,000 with contingency. I can approve that today.
HenryThree questions. Do we have production capacity? Do we have the supplier relationships? And can we get samples to QuickStop before August 25th?
OwenProduction: yes — line modification is 3–4 weeks. Supplier: CertOrganic confirmed 2-week lead time. Samples: if we start modification Monday, prototype samples in approximately five weeks — August 28th. Three days after the QuickStop deadline.
EvaI'll call QuickStop today to ask if we can push sample submission to September 1st. They're interested — I think they'll accommodate.
HenryThen I approve. $220,000 capex. Proceed with production modification. Claire — this project is yours to run. Same approach, same team. You have my confidence.
MarcusSprint Goal Achieved
All six deliverables accepted. Board decision secured. Sprint 2 complete.
Sprint 2 · Retrospective
The Process Improves Again
The retro opens by checking Sprint 1's three commitments — were they actually implemented? Only then does the team move to new stickies. This sequencing proves that retrospectives create real change, not just conversation.
What to watch for
Start with the commitment check — all three Sprint 1 retro actions were implemented. That's the rarest thing in any improvement process: 100% follow-through. Track why it happened: each commitment had a specific owner, a specific action, and a specific date. Nothing was left vague. Now watch what the new stickies reveal — the board memo had a single point of failure, and Thomas names it directly. Claire agrees without defensiveness. The team that disagreed about methodology in Sprint 1 is now giving each other honest critical feedback. That shift is the methodology working.
Retrospective
Sprint 2 — Retrospective
Friday · 11:45 · 50 minutes
MarcusBefore stickies — Sprint 1 retro commitments. Stand-ups at 10:00: yes, Claire on time every day. Pre-sprint supplier contact: yes, Owen had quotes before Day 3. Dependency arrows: they're on the board — did they help?
ThomasThey helped me directly. I could see Sophie's interviews were blocking my memo section. Instead of waiting for stand-up, I pinged her directly on Thursday. Resolved in five minutes.
MarcusRetro commitments: 100% completion rate. That's the baseline we want every sprint.
Consumer interviews early in the sprint — findings fed directly into the memo
FreshCo → ValueMart swap was fast and clean — the blocker escalation model works
Thomas stress-testing the model before the board — CFO's question was answered before it was asked
Black sesame insight handled without chaos — team learned to absorb small changes mid-sprint
All Sprint 1 retro commitments implemented — team trusts the process now
Investment memo too dependent on one person — Claire was a single point of failure on the critical deliverable
No buffer in the timeline — Owen's production estimate almost missed the QuickStop deadline by 3 days
Marcus's decision framework done last, felt rushed — should have guided the memo, not appended to it
Still no shared document standard — Thomas, Sophie, Eva delivered in different formats
Any L-sized task: identify a named backup reviewer by Day 5 — no single point of failure
Build a 2-day buffer before external deadlines — "done" means delivered, not just finished internally
Create a 1-page deliverable template: finding → implication → recommendation. Adopt from Sprint 3
Sprint 3 planning: include an explicit "launch prep" sprint — samples, retailer presentations, production readiness
ClaireThe single-point-of-failure comment is about me, and it's fair. Sprint 3 is bigger. I need a writing partner, not just reviewers.
ThomasI'll be that partner. The financial narrative is my section anyway. We co-author board materials from here on.
Sprint 3 Process Commitments
Claire + ThomasAny L-sized task has a named backup reviewer by Day 5 — no single point of failure on critical deliverablesS3 Planning
MarcusExternal deadline buffer built into planning — external-facing deadlines must be achievable by Wednesday of Week 2, not FridayS3 Planning
SophieCreate shared 1-page deliverable template: finding → implication → recommendation. Team adopts from Sprint 3 onwardBefore S3 Planning
OwenFor the record — I was the most sceptical person in that first planning session. I still think the sprint model has quirks that don't fit a food factory perfectly. But we moved faster than I've seen this company move in ten years. I'm in for Sprint 3.
MarcusTwo sprints. Six people. One board decision. From idea to approved capex in 28 days. Sprint 3 planning is Monday at 09:00. We now have a real product to build.
—Marcus closes the board. Tasks are archived — photographed, filed. A new board will go up Monday. Somewhere in the building, the founder is on the phone telling his brother that his daughter's project got board approval. He doesn't mention the sprints. But he smiles when he says "four weeks."
Sprint 2 Complete · Sprint 3 Begins
Sprint 3 · Weeks 5–6
Build the Product. Pursue the Listing.
Sprint Goal
Complete production line modification spec, order certified ingredients from CertOrganic, and deliver physical prototype samples — so the team is ready to present to QuickStop the moment their September review window opens.
Sprint 3 is the first sprint where the team is executing rather than analysing. The internal work is well-defined and fully controllable. But a critical external dependency is now live in parallel: the QuickStop retail listing process, which runs on the retailer's own timeline. This sprint introduces the Watch Item pattern for the first time.
Milestone Map — updated after board approval
Internal Milestone 1 ✓
Prototype decision made — achieved Sprint 1
Internal Milestone 2 ✓
Board approves capex — achieved Sprint 2
Internal Milestone 3 → now
Physical prototype samples produced and ready for retail presentation — target end Sprint 3
External Milestone — watch item
QuickStop category committee confirms retail listing — committee meets late September, decision expected October. Owner: Eva.
Internal Milestone 4 — gated
Finalise packaging spec and commercial terms — cannot start until QuickStop confirms shelf dimensions and listing conditions
Internal Milestone 5
First production run completed and delivered to retail — target Sprint 5–6
Sprint 3 Backlog
| # | Task | Owner | Priority | Size | Type |
| S3-01 | Production line modification spec — finalise engineering brief with equipment vendor, confirm timeline and cost | Owen | Must | M | Task |
| S3-02 | Place ingredient order — CertOrganic certified rice flour and black sesame, 500kg minimum, delivery Week 4 | Owen | Must | S | Task |
| S3-03 | Prototype batch — produce 50 units of black sesame rice cracker using manual process before line modification | Owen | Must | L | Task |
| S3-04 | Packaging concept — brief designer on paper wrap format, 3 visual directions for review by Claire | Sophie | Should | M | Task |
| S3-05 | Retail presentation deck — 6 slides: product story, consumer data, pricing, margin model, production timeline | Claire + Thomas | Should | M | Task |
| W-01 | WATCH: QuickStop listing process — maintain buyer relationship, confirm September agenda slot, answer any pre-committee questions, track committee date | Eva | — | — | Watch Item |
| W-02 | WATCH: ValueMart October review — maintain contact with buyer, confirm product requirements if listing moves forward | Eva | — | — | Watch Item |
Watch Items on the Physical Board
W-01 and W-02 are written on blue sticky notes and pinned to a separate section of the board labelled "External Track." They are never moved to In Progress or Done columns. They are updated at every stand-up with a next action and date. They do not count toward sprint velocity. The sprint goal is written against the five internal tasks only.
Sprint Planning
Sprint 3 — Planning Session
Monday · 09:00 · 2h 05min
—The board is fresh. The retro commitments from Sprint 2 are already in place — Sophie's deliverable template is printed and taped to the wall. A new section has been added to the bottom right of the board: "External Track," marked in blue.
ClaireSprint 3 is different from the first two. We're not analysing anymore — we're building. The milestone we need to hit is physical prototype samples in hand by Friday the 28th. That's what unlocks the QuickStop presentation.
MarcusBefore we go into the backlog — I want to name something explicitly for the first time. We now have two tracks running in parallel. The internal track: the five tasks we control completely. The external track: the QuickStop and ValueMart listing processes. These run on different clocks. The sprint goal covers only the internal track. Watch items cover the external track. Eva owns both watch items. The sprint does not fail if QuickStop hasn't confirmed — it fails only if the prototype isn't ready.
EvaUnderstood. On QuickStop: I spoke to their buyer last Thursday. The category committee meets September 24th. She confirmed we're on the agenda — but "on the agenda" means they'll look at our submission, not that they'll approve it. I need to deliver a product sheet and physical sample by September 19th to be included.
ClaireSeptember 19th is Day 9 of this sprint. Owen — is that achievable?
OwenManual batch is the risk. I need the ingredient delivery first. CertOrganic confirmed 7-day lead time — if I order today, delivery Thursday. Batch production Saturday or Sunday. Samples ready Monday the 16th. Eva gets them Tuesday the 17th — two days before her deadline.
MarcusThat's a tight chain with no buffer. Owen — what breaks it?
OwenIf CertOrganic delivery slips even one day, I lose the weekend window. I'd need to produce Monday the 15th instead, samples to Eva Tuesday — still makes it but with zero margin.
MarcusDependency on the board with a red string from S3-02 to S3-03 to W-01. Owen — order the ingredients in the next hour, not end of day. Don't let planning be the delay.
OwenOrdering from my phone right now.
ThomasS3-05 — the retail presentation deck. Claire and I co-author. One question: do we present the QuickStop-specific version or a generic deck we adapt per retailer?
ClaireGeneric core, QuickStop-specific last two slides. We'll need a ValueMart version in Sprint 4 anyway. Build it modular.
MarcusSprint Goal — internal track: "Physical prototype samples produced, production spec confirmed, and presentation deck ready — so the team can present to any retailer the moment a window opens." Watch items run in parallel. Everyone clear?
Sprint 3 · Days 23 & 27
Stand-ups — Watch Items in Action
Day 23 shows how watch items are handled at stand-up — distinct from regular tasks, always with a next action. Day 27 shows what happens when an external milestone sends back an unexpected signal mid-sprint.
Daily Stand-up
Stand-up — Day 23 (Wednesday Week 1)
Wednesday · 10:00 · 15 minutes
—Ingredients arrived Thursday as planned. Owen spent the weekend on the manual batch — 52 units produced. Two tasks are Done. Marcus walks the internal board first, then the external track.
MarcusInternal track first. S3-02: Done — ingredients in. S3-03: Done — 52 units produced, Owen confirmed batch quality is good. S3-01: In Progress, engineering spec 70% complete. S3-04: In Progress, designer delivering three visual directions Friday. S3-05: In Progress, Claire and Thomas have a draft structure. Now external track — Eva.
EvaW-01 — QuickStop. Samples delivered yesterday. Buyer confirmed receipt and said they look "very promising." Committee date confirmed: September 24th. My next action: send the product sheet and margin model by Friday, follow up Monday to confirm the committee has everything they need. No blockers.
MarcusGood. Note the difference — Eva isn't saying "waiting to hear back." She has a specific next action with a specific date. That's what a watch item update looks like.
EvaW-02 — ValueMart. Spoke to their buyer Monday. They want a product sample too before their October review. I'll send a set of the same 52 units Owen produced. Next action: courier samples to ValueMart Thursday. No blockers.
OwenEngineering spec: I have a concern. The vendor quoted 4-week modification timeline, but two of those weeks are waiting for a custom part from Germany. If that part is delayed, we push into production week 6, not week 4. I'm flagging early — not a blocker yet.
MarcusAdd it to the watch section — not a sprint blocker, but track it. Owen — do you know of any alternative part source?
OwenThere's a domestic supplier. 40% more expensive but 1-week lead time. I'll get a quote today. If the German delivery slips, we have a fallback ready.
Daily Stand-up
Stand-up — Day 27 (Monday Week 2)
Monday · 10:00 · 20 minutes
—An unexpected signal from QuickStop over the weekend. Eva flags it at the start of stand-up before Marcus walks the board.
EvaW-01 update — and this is important. I got an email from the QuickStop buyer on Saturday. The committee wants to know our minimum order commitment before the September 24th meeting. They're asking for a letter of intent from us on volumes. This is new — it wasn't part of the original submission requirements.
ClaireWhat volumes are they asking for?
Eva15,000 units per month minimum, consistent with what ValueMart mentioned. They want our commitment in writing before the committee sits.
Thomas15,000 units per month — that's within our production capacity post-modification. I can confirm that number against the engineering spec today.
ClaireThis isn't a blocker — it's a decision. I can sign a letter of intent. Thomas — confirm the production number is solid by noon. I'll draft the letter this afternoon, Eva sends it by end of day. Does that work?
EvaThat works. I'll follow up immediately once sent to confirm receipt before the weekend.
MarcusThis is a good example of why watch items get a stand-up update every single day. An email over a weekend that changes a committee submission requirement — if Eva had only updated us weekly, we'd have missed the window entirely. The watch item surfaced it in time to act. Internal track — Owen?
OwenEngineering spec: Done as of Friday. Domestic part supplier quote came back — $2,200 premium over German supplier. Henry approved the contingency spend Friday afternoon. German delivery still expected on time but we have the backup confirmed. S3-01 is Done.
MarcusFour of five internal tasks Done. S3-04 packaging concepts in review with Claire today. We're in good shape for Friday. Twenty minutes — slightly over, but the QuickStop discussion was worth it.
Sprint 3 · End of Week 2
Sprint Review — Internal Goal Met, External Clock Running
Sprint Review
Sprint 3 — Sprint Review
Friday · 14:00 · 60 minutes
—All five internal tasks are in Done. The external track has two watch items still open — both progressing, neither resolved. The sprint review covers internal deliverables only. Watch items get a status summary at the end.
MarcusSprint Goal: "Physical prototype samples produced, production spec confirmed, and presentation deck ready." All five internal tasks complete. Let's demo. Owen — samples first.
Owen52 units of black sesame rice cracker. Paper packaging, hand-labelled for now. Production spec confirmed — line modification starts Monday, 4-week timeline, domestic part contingency in place. Engineering vendor signed off Friday morning.
ClaireAccepted
S3-01, S3-02, S3-03: Done. These samples are the first physical proof that this product exists. I want everyone to take one home this weekend.
SophieS3-04 — three packaging directions. Direction A: minimal white with botanical illustration. Direction B: kraft paper with embossed logo. Direction C: recycled pulp with hand-lettering. Consumer preference from Sophie's earlier interviews points to B or C — "looks like it came from a farmers market" was the phrase that kept coming up.
ClaireAccepted — Direction B to develop further
Kraft paper, embossed. That's the one. Brief the designer to develop B into production-ready artwork in Sprint 4.
ThomasS3-05 — retail presentation deck. Six slides. Product story, consumer validation data, pricing at $4.50 retail, 42% gate margin, production timeline, minimum order terms. Modular — last two slides are retailer-specific. QuickStop version is ready. ValueMart version needs minor adaptation.
ClaireAccepted
S3-05: Done. This is the deck we present to any retailer from here on. Sprint Goal: fully achieved.
MarcusExternal track update — Eva, brief summary for the record.
EvaW-01 QuickStop: letter of intent sent Monday, buyer confirmed receipt Tuesday. Committee sits September 24th — six days from now. We are on the agenda with a complete submission. Decision expected by end of September. I have a call booked with the buyer for September 25th, the day after. W-02 ValueMart: samples delivered, buyer responded positively, October 12th review slot confirmed.
ClaireBoth external tracks are moving. We've done everything we can do. The September 24th committee decision is out of our hands — and that's fine. We'll be ready to move within days of their answer either way.
MarcusSprint Goal Achieved
Five of five internal tasks done. Watch items progressing on schedule. Sprint 3 complete.
Sprint 3 · Retrospective
What the External Track Taught Us
What to watch for
The most important observation from this retro isn't about process — it's Eva's strategic point at the end. She reframes the QuickStop / ValueMart relationship not as primary and backup but as two parallel bets at different stages of the market: brand-building vs. scale. That reframing changes how the programme thinks about external dependencies — not as risks to mitigate but as portfolio positions to manage. Marcus's closing observation is the key takeaway from three sprints: the watch item structure didn't just catch a deadline — it changed the team's posture toward uncertainty itself.
Retrospective
Sprint 3 — Retrospective
Friday · 15:15 · 45 minutes
Watch item discipline — Eva's daily next-action format caught the QuickStop letter of intent requirement before it became a missed deadline
Owen ordering ingredients during planning — removed a day of delay before it could happen
Domestic part contingency prepared before it was needed — Henry approved spend in minutes because Owen had already done the work
Separating internal and external track in stand-ups — meetings feel cleaner, nobody conflates "we're waiting for QuickStop" with "the sprint is stuck"
Letter of intent requirement from QuickStop was a surprise — we should have asked explicitly about committee submission requirements at the first contact
Packaging brief went to designer late — Sophie had S3-04 as Should Have and treated it accordingly; it almost didn't make the review
No contingency plan if QuickStop says no on September 24th — we've optimised for the yes, not prepared for the no
For every new external relationship: ask "what does your decision process require from us?" at first contact — map their process, not just ours
S4 planning: add explicit "if QuickStop says no" scenario to the milestone map — what does the programme look like with ValueMart as the launch retailer instead?
Should Have tasks that feed an external deadline get treated as Must Have — update our planning language
EvaOn the "if QuickStop says no" point — I actually think ValueMart is a stronger long-term partner. Higher volume, faster growth in organic. QuickStop is the brand-building launch. ValueMart is the scale play. We should plan for both in parallel, not treat QuickStop as the only path.
ClaireThat's Sprint 4 planning material. Put it on the backlog — "dual-retailer launch scenario analysis." If the QuickStop committee says yes, we move fast. If they say no, we pivot to ValueMart with a plan already in hand. I want to never be caught without a next move.
MarcusThat's exactly the right instinct — and it's what the watch item structure enables. Because we were tracking both retailers all along, we're not starting from zero if one path closes. The external track isn't just one thread. It's a portfolio of external bets, all managed in parallel.
Sprint 4 Process Commitments
EvaAdd "map their decision process" to the watch item setup checklist — ask at first contact, not when a deadline appearsS4 Planning
ClaireAdd "dual-retailer launch scenario" to backlog — plan for both QuickStop yes and QuickStop no before the September 24th answer arrivesBefore S4 Planning
MarcusUpdate planning rule: Should Have tasks with external deadlines are treated as Must Have — adjust sizing and commitment accordinglyS4 Planning
Three-Sprint Summary
What 42 Days Produced
15/16Tasks Completed (excl. dropped & watch items)
3/3Sprint Goals Achieved
100%Retro Commitments Implemented
2External Tracks Managed in Parallel
Sprint 1 shows a team learning in real time. Sprint 2 shows what happens when that learning is acted upon. Sprint 3 introduces a new pattern: the watch item, and the discipline of separating work the team controls from decisions that belong to external parties. The programme moves forward without waiting for the world to cooperate — because it was never designed to wait.
"The methodology doesn't prevent problems. It surfaces them fast enough to fix — and it keeps moving while the external world catches up."
Project Leaf · Sprint 1–3 Simulation