Agile Glossary

Timebox

What is Timebox?

A timebox is a previously agreed period of time during which a person or a team works steadily towards the completion of some goal. Rather than allow work to continue until the goal is reached, and evaluate the time taken, the timebox approach consists of stopping work when the time limit is reached and evaluating what was accomplished.

Timeboxes can be used at varying time scales. The “Pomodoro technique” organizes personal work around 25-minute timeboxes. In a completely different domain “speed dating” is known for its seven-minute timeboxes. Time scales ranging from one day to several months have been used.

The critical rule of timeboxed work is that work should stop at the end of the timebox, and review progress: has the goal been met, or partially met if it included multiple tasks?

Origins

Timeboxed iterations are a distinctive feature of the early Agile approaches, notably Scrum and Extreme Programming, but they have an earlier history:

  • 1988: the “timebox” is described as a cornerstone of Scott Schultz’s “Rapid Iterative Production Prototyping” approach in use at a Du Pont spin-off, Information Engineering Associates
  • 1991: the details of the “timebox” are described at length in one chapter of James Martin’s “Rapid Application Development”

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Additional Agile Glossary Terms

The daily meeting is structured around the following three questions: What have you completed? What will you do next? What is getting in your way?
Business agility is the ability of an organization to sense changes internally or externally and respond accordingly in order to deliver value to its customers.
Antipatterns are common solutions to common problems where the solution is ineffective and may result in undesired consequences.
Test-driven development (TDD) is a style of programming where coding, testing, and design are tightly interwoven. Benefits include reduction in defect rates.
The scrum master is the team role responsible for ensuring the team lives agile values and principles and follows the processes and practices that the team agreed they would use.
Splitting consists of breaking up one user story into smaller ones, while preserving the property that each user story separately has measurable business value.
A Kanban Board is a visual workflow tool consisting of multiple columns. Each column represents a different stage in the workflow process.

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