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plan-sprint

pjt222
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À propos

La compétence `plan-sprint` automatise la planification de sprint en affinant les éléments du backlog, en définissant un objectif, en calculant la capacité de l'équipe et en décomposant les éléments sélectionnés en tâches. Elle génère un fichier structuré `SPRINT-PLAN.md` contenant l'objectif, les éléments sélectionnés, la répartition des tâches et l'allocation des capacités. Utilisez-la pour démarrer un nouveau sprint Scrum, replanifier après des changements de périmètre ou pour passer d'un travail ad hoc à un rythme de sprint structuré.

Installation rapide

Claude Code

Recommandé
Principal
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Commande PluginAlternatif
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternatif
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/plan-sprint

Copiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence

Documentation

Plan a Sprint

Plan a time-boxed sprint by selecting refined backlog items up to team capacity, defining a clear sprint goal, and decomposing selected items into actionable tasks. This skill produces a complete sprint plan that guides team work for the duration of the sprint iteration.

When to Use

  • Starting a new sprint in a Scrum or agile project
  • Re-planning a sprint after significant scope change
  • Transitioning from ad-hoc work to structured sprint cadence
  • After backlog grooming when items are ready for sprint inclusion
  • Planning the first sprint after project charter approval

Inputs

  • Required: Product backlog (prioritized, with estimates)
  • Required: Sprint duration (typically 1-2 weeks)
  • Required: Team members and their availability
  • Optional: Previous sprint velocity (story points or items completed)
  • Optional: Sprint number and date range
  • Optional: Carry-over items from previous sprint

Procedure

Step 1: Review and Refine Backlog Items

Read the current BACKLOG.md. For each candidate item near the top of the backlog, verify it has:

  • Clear title and description
  • Acceptance criteria (testable conditions)
  • Estimate (story points or T-shirt size)
  • No unresolved blockers

Refine any items missing these elements. Split items estimated larger than half the sprint capacity into smaller, more manageable pieces.

Got: Top 10-15 backlog items are "sprint-ready" with acceptance criteria and estimates.

If fail: If items lack acceptance criteria, write them now. If items can't be estimated, schedule a refinement conversation and select only ready items.

Step 2: Define Sprint Goal

Write a single clear sprint goal — one sentence stating what the sprint will achieve. The goal should be:

  • Achievable within the sprint duration
  • Valuable to stakeholders
  • Testable (you can verify it was met at sprint end)
**Sprint Goal**: [One sentence describing the objective]

Example: "Enable users to reset their password through email verification with two-factor authentication."

Got: Sprint goal articulated as one clear, testable sentence.

If fail: If no coherent goal emerges, the backlog priorities may be scattered — consult the product owner to focus on a single valuable outcome.

Step 3: Calculate Team Capacity

Calculate available person-days for each team member:

## Team Capacity
| Team Member | Available Days | Overhead (%) | Net Capacity |
|-------------|---------------|-------------|--------------|
| [Name] | [Sprint days - PTO] | 20% | [Available × 0.8] |
| [Name] | [Sprint days - PTO] | 20% | [Available × 0.8] |
| **Total** | | | **[Sum] person-days** |

Overhead accounts for meetings, reviews, ad-hoc requests (typically 15-25%).

If using story points: use previous sprint velocity as capacity. If first sprint, use 60-70% of theoretical maximum.

Got: Capacity calculated in person-days or story points with documented assumptions.

If fail: If no historical velocity exists, be conservative — plan to 60% capacity and adjust after the sprint. Better to under-commit and deliver than over-commit and fail.

Step 4: Select Items and Compose Sprint Backlog

Select items from the top of the product backlog until capacity is reached. Decompose each selected item into tasks (2-8 hours each):

# Sprint Plan: Sprint [N]
## Document ID: SP-[PROJECT]-S[NNN]

### Sprint Details
- **Sprint Goal**: [From Step 2]
- **Duration**: [Start date] to [End date]
- **Capacity**: [From Step 3] person-days / [N] story points
- **Team**: [List team members]

### Sprint Backlog
| ID | Item | Points | Tasks | Assignee | Status |
|----|------|--------|-------|----------|--------|
| B-001 | [Item title] | 5 | 4 | [Name] | To Do |
| B-002 | [Item title] | 3 | 3 | [Name] | To Do |
| B-003 | [Item title] | 8 | 6 | [Name] | To Do |
| **Total** | | **16** | **13** | | |

### Task Breakdown

#### B-001: [Item title]
**Acceptance Criteria**: [From backlog item]

- [ ] Task 1: [Description] (4h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 2: [Description] (2h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 3: [Description] (4h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 4: [Description] (2h, [Assignee])

#### B-002: [Item title]
**Acceptance Criteria**: [From backlog item]

- [ ] Task 1: [Description] (3h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 2: [Description] (4h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 3: [Description] (2h, [Assignee])

#### B-003: [Item title]
**Acceptance Criteria**: [From backlog item]

- [ ] Task 1: [Description] (3h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 2: [Description] (4h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 3: [Description] (2h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 4: [Description] (3h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 5: [Description] (4h, [Assignee])
- [ ] Task 6: [Description] (2h, [Assignee])

### Risks and Dependencies
| Risk | Impact | Mitigation |
|------|--------|-----------|
| [Risk 1] | [Impact] | [Mitigation] |
| [Risk 2] | [Impact] | [Mitigation] |

### Carry-Over from Previous Sprint
| ID | Item | Reason | Remaining Effort |
|----|------|--------|-----------------|
| B-XXX | [Item] | [Reason] | [Hours/points] |

Got: Sprint backlog with items selected up to capacity, each decomposed into tasks with time estimates.

If fail: If total points exceed capacity, remove the lowest-priority item. Never exceed capacity by more than 10%. If dependencies block sequencing, re-order or defer items.

Step 5: Document Commitments and Save

Write the sprint plan to SPRINT-PLAN.md (or SPRINT-PLAN-S[NNN].md for archival). Confirm:

  • Sprint goal is achievable with selected items
  • No team member is overallocated (>100% capacity)
  • Dependencies between items are sequenced correctly
  • Carry-over items are accounted for in capacity
  • All acceptance criteria copied from backlog items

Run a final validation:

# Check that total task hours align with capacity
grep -A 100 "Task Breakdown" SPRINT-PLAN.md | grep -o '([0-9]*h' | sed 's/[^0-9]//g' | awk '{sum+=$1} END {print "Total hours:", sum}'

Got: SPRINT-PLAN.md created with complete sprint backlog and task breakdown. Total hours should be ≤80% of available person-days × 8 hours.

If fail: If commitments don't align with goal, revisit item selection in Step 4. If task hours exceed capacity, remove the last item or decompose tasks more granularly.

Validation

  • Sprint goal is one clear, testable sentence
  • Team capacity calculated with documented assumptions (overhead %, PTO accounted)
  • Selected items do not exceed capacity (points or person-days)
  • Every selected item has acceptance criteria copied into task breakdown
  • Every selected item is decomposed into tasks (2-8 hours each)
  • No team member overallocated beyond 100% capacity
  • Carry-over items from previous sprint documented with remaining effort
  • Dependencies between items sequenced correctly
  • Risks and mitigations documented
  • SPRINT-PLAN.md file created and saved

Pitfalls

  • No sprint goal: Without a goal, the sprint is just a bag of tasks. The goal provides focus and a basis for scope decisions mid-sprint.
  • Over-commitment: Planning to 100% capacity ignores interruptions, bugs, and overhead. Plan to 70-80% to leave buffer for the unexpected.
  • Tasks too large: Tasks over 8 hours hide complexity and make progress tracking difficult. Decompose until tasks are 2-8 hours.
  • Ignoring carry-over: Unfinished items from the last sprint consume capacity this sprint. Account for them explicitly in capacity calculations.
  • Sprint goal as item list: "Complete B-001, B-002, B-003" is not a goal. A goal describes the outcome: "Users can reset their password through email verification."
  • No task ownership: Every task should have an assignee at planning time to surface capacity conflicts early.
  • Skipping acceptance criteria: Tasks without acceptance criteria can't be tested. Copy acceptance criteria from backlog items into the task breakdown section.

Related Skills

  • manage-backlog — maintain and prioritize the product backlog that feeds sprint planning
  • draft-project-charter — provides project context and initial scope for the first sprint
  • generate-status-report — report sprint progress and velocity to stakeholders
  • conduct-retrospective — review sprint execution and improve the planning process
  • create-work-breakdown-structure — WBS work packages can feed the backlog in hybrid agile-waterfall approaches

Dépôt GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Chemin: i18n/caveman-lite/skills/plan-sprint
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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