Retrospective Facilitation
Table of Contents
Overview
Retrospectives are critical ceremonies for team learning and continuous improvement. Effective facilitation creates psychological safety, encourages honest feedback, and drives tangible improvements.
When to Use
- End of sprint (regular cadence)
- Major milestone completion
- Project closure
- After significant events or incidents
- Team transitions or staff changes
- Technology implementations
- Process evaluations
Quick Start
Minimal working example:
Retrospective Planning:
Event: Sprint 23 Retrospective
Date: Friday, Jan 17, 2025
Duration: 60 minutes
Location: Conference Room B / Zoom
Facilitator: Sarah (Scrum Master)
Participants: 8 team members
Invite: Product Owner (optional)
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Retrospective Goals: 1. Celebrate sprint successes
2. Identify what went well
3. Identify what could improve
4. Commit to specific improvements
5. Build team cohesion
Format: "Went Well / Didn't Go Well / Ideas"
Tool: Miro board for virtual collaboration
Pre-Retrospective Preparation:
- Send survey: anonymous feedback (24hrs before)
- Gather sprint metrics (velocity, bugs, etc.)
- Review sprint goals and outcomes
// ... (see reference guides for full implementation)
Reference Guides
Detailed implementations in the references/ directory:
| Guide | Contents |
|---|---|
| Retrospective Planning | Retrospective Planning |
| Facilitation Techniques | Facilitation Techniques |
| Action Item Tracking | Action Item Tracking |
| Retrospective Templates | Retrospective Templates |
Best Practices
✅ DO
- Hold retrospectives regularly (every sprint)
- Create psychological safety upfront
- Use varied formats to maintain engagement
- Include the whole team
- Focus on systems, not individuals
- Convert insights to specific action items
- Assign clear owners and due dates
- Track and celebrate completed actions
- Review previous actions at start
- Thank people for participation and honesty
❌ DON'T
- Blame individuals or teams
- Let dominant voices control discussion
- Create action items without owners
- Have retrospectives without follow-up
- Ignore difficult feedback
- Focus only on what went wrong
- Hold retrospectives when people are tired/stressed
- Skip closing/celebration
- Mix retrospectives with status meetings
- Ignore patterns across multiple retrospectives