• DocumentCode
    3664439
  • Title

    Managing Technical Debt in Software Projects Using Scrum: An Action Research

  • Author

    Frederico Oliveira;Alfredo Goldman;Viviane Santos

  • Author_Institution
    Inst. of Res. Technol., Sao Paulo, Brazil
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    50
  • Lastpage
    59
  • Abstract
    Ward Cunningham in his experience report presented at the OOPSLA´92 conference introduced the metaphor of technical debt. This metaphor is related to immature, incomplete or inadequate artifacts in the software development cycle that cause higher costs and lower quality. A strategy for the technical debt management is still a challenge because its definition is not yet part of the software development process. Carolyn Seaman and Yuepu Guo proposed a technical debt management framework based on three stages. First, debts are identified and listed. After that, debts are measured by their payment efforts and then debts are selected to be considered in the software development cycle. This study evaluates the application of this framework in the real context of software projects adopting Scrum. Action research is conducted in two companies where their projects have significant technical debt. We performed three action research cycles based on the three stages of the framework for both companies. The main contribution of this paper is to provide real experiences and improvements for projects using Scrum and that may adopt the technical debt management framework proposed by Seaman and Guo. Both teams recognized that the proposed approach is feasible for being considered in the software development process after some modifications. Because of projects time constraints and ease of use, we reduced the use of the proposed metrics to two: Principal and the Current Amount of Interest. In consequence, decision-making was benefitted by the early consideration of the debts that really need to be paid. Instead of using probabilities to find the interest, these are registered every time the technical debt occurs. During the first phase, the debts identification was improved when all Scrum roles participated, while measurement and decision-making were improved when the team was responsible for these phases. The Product Owner role in both companies understood the importance of Technical Debt monitoring and prioritization during a development cycle. With these changes, the two teams mentioned they would remain using the resulting approach.
  • Keywords
    "Software","Seminars","Companies","Visualization","Monitoring","Planning","Decision making"
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Agile Conference (AGILE), 2015
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/Agile.2015.7
  • Filename
    7284597