Andy Brandt
Code Sprinters
Languages
- English
- Polish
Country
PolandReviews
What students say about AndySep 26, 2023
Professionalism
Clear and well-paced course that puts the emphasis on the understanding and the feeling of the philosophy of Scrum and the role of the Product Owner.
Wlodek Splawski
Read full review
Jun 19, 2023
Great to get managers point of view
It is great to have opportunity to hear and learn the managers point of view, to put yourself in managers shoes and discuss how to behave on different real life situations.
Piotr Książek
Read full review
Jun 7, 2023
Great!
Scrum is empirical, so I can't imagine a better training workshops than this!
Igor Karkoszka
Read full review
Dec 23, 2022
One of the best experience in terms of…
One of the best experience in terms of learning.
No easy answears only the story telling to find idea.
Time boxes, the idea and the material it all compose
Piotr Szczęch
Read full review
Dec 10, 2022
PSFS Training
Great class by Andy Brandt focused on practical facilitation techniques and highlighting practical aspects of Scrum ceremonies facilitation. Highly recommend.
Tomasz Kandziora
Read full review
Oct 31, 2022
I really admire Andy's ability to…
I really admire Andy's ability to conduct meaningful discussion in this relatively short time between group exercises.
Magdalena Kucharska
Read full review
Nov 27, 2021
high on merits and experience
As with any training with Andy Brandt - these classes were high on merits and findings from direct business experience.
Weronika Seweryn
Read full review
Nov 27, 2021
Great course with plenty of interaction opportunities between participants
Great, varied course with plenty of interaction opportunities between participants. Fantastic instructor!
Michal Sadowski
Read full review
Oct 15, 2021
Eliza
Really good classes!
Eliza Dzioak
Read full review
Jun 15, 2021
It has been great VLC
It has been great VLC. Thanks Andy
Artur Czernicki
Read full review
May 27, 2021
Andy Brandt hosted really informative…
Andy Brandt hosted really informative and well organized PSPO Advanced online training. He easily kept focus of the attendees with interesting discussions and both, group and individual, exercises. He also organized very useful Q&As at the end of each live training session. I would highly recommend Scrum training hosted by Andy Brandt.
Łukasz Liszka
Read full review
Jan 17, 2021
I got more than expected.
Andy is very open and able to discuss a given topic on many levels of understanding.
He encourages the group to experiment and guides teams thru the discovery process.
Antoni Łęcki
Read full review
Apr 24, 2020
Greatly informative training which I…
Greatly informative training which I highly recommend.
Marcin Gawior
Read full review
Apr 24, 2020
Great
The training was very good.
Professional and experienced trainer.
Dec 11, 2019
Great training!
Great training!
Krzysztof
Read full review
Oct 29, 2019
Good training
Good training, but not focused enough on Certification. My expectation was that this training will prepare me better to certification.
Marcin Grochala
Read full review
Oct 10, 2019
Brilliant training!
Great training with a large dose of practical knowledge.
Kamil Lang
Read full review
May 17, 2019
Andy was very much acting on our…
Andy was very much acting on our suggestions on adding additional points to the training. He was answering our questions adding real life examples. I would like to recommend Andy' training to anyone looking to take PSM I cert.
Apr 15, 2019
Excellent coach
Excellent coach. Learned a lot
Lukasz Walkiewicz
Read full review
Mar 21, 2019
recommend
very good training, useful knowladge
Marcin Kępka
Read full review
Mar 20, 2019
Valuable PSM II Workshops
Small group of participants who are guided by experienced trainer. Vital excercises and questions which allow to be a better Scrum Master.
Agnieszka Z
Read full review
About Andy
During his 30+ years in IT industry Andy has done many things – he was a programmer, a Unix system administrator, a trainer, a Linux evangelist, an analyst, a project manager (and a PMP) and a regular manager, then also a ScrumMaster and founder of a young, agile software development startup. He is also Poland's most experienced Scrum trainer and first PST holding the honor of delivering first ever certified Scrum training in Polish in 2010.
Currently Andy is leading Code Sprinters, the software company that evolved into Poland's largest provider of agile-related training and coaching.
What students say about Andy
Sep 26, 2023
Professionalism
Clear and well-paced course that puts the emphasis on the understanding and the feeling of the philosophy of Scrum and the role of the Product Owner.
Wlodek Splawski
Read full review
Jun 19, 2023
Great to get managers point of view
It is great to have opportunity to hear and learn the managers point of view, to put yourself in managers shoes and discuss how to behave on different real life situations.
Piotr Książek
Read full review
Jun 7, 2023
Great!
Scrum is empirical, so I can't imagine a better training workshops than this!
Igor Karkoszka
Read full review
Dec 23, 2022
One of the best experience in terms of…
One of the best experience in terms of learning.
No easy answears only the story telling to find idea.
Time boxes, the idea and the material it all compose
Piotr Szczęch
Read full review
Dec 10, 2022
PSFS Training
Great class by Andy Brandt focused on practical facilitation techniques and highlighting practical aspects of Scrum ceremonies facilitation. Highly recommend.
Tomasz Kandziora
Read full review
Oct 31, 2022
I really admire Andy's ability to…
I really admire Andy's ability to conduct meaningful discussion in this relatively short time between group exercises.
Magdalena Kucharska
Read full review
Nov 27, 2021
high on merits and experience
As with any training with Andy Brandt - these classes were high on merits and findings from direct business experience.
Weronika Seweryn
Read full review
Nov 27, 2021
Great course with plenty of interaction opportunities between participants
Great, varied course with plenty of interaction opportunities between participants. Fantastic instructor!
Michal Sadowski
Read full review
Oct 15, 2021
Eliza
Really good classes!
Eliza Dzioak
Read full review
Jun 15, 2021
It has been great VLC
It has been great VLC. Thanks Andy
Artur Czernicki
Read full review
May 27, 2021
Andy Brandt hosted really informative…
Andy Brandt hosted really informative and well organized PSPO Advanced online training. He easily kept focus of the attendees with interesting discussions and both, group and individual, exercises. He also organized very useful Q&As at the end of each live training session. I would highly recommend Scrum training hosted by Andy Brandt.
Łukasz Liszka
Read full review
Jan 17, 2021
I got more than expected.
Andy is very open and able to discuss a given topic on many levels of understanding.
He encourages the group to experiment and guides teams thru the discovery process.
Antoni Łęcki
Read full review
Apr 24, 2020
Greatly informative training which I…
Greatly informative training which I highly recommend.
Marcin Gawior
Read full review
Apr 24, 2020
Great
The training was very good.
Professional and experienced trainer.
Dec 11, 2019
Great training!
Great training!
Krzysztof
Read full review
Oct 29, 2019
Good training
Good training, but not focused enough on Certification. My expectation was that this training will prepare me better to certification.
Marcin Grochala
Read full review
Oct 10, 2019
Brilliant training!
Great training with a large dose of practical knowledge.
Kamil Lang
Read full review
May 17, 2019
Andy was very much acting on our…
Andy was very much acting on our suggestions on adding additional points to the training. He was answering our questions adding real life examples. I would like to recommend Andy' training to anyone looking to take PSM I cert.
Apr 15, 2019
Excellent coach
Excellent coach. Learned a lot
Lukasz Walkiewicz
Read full review
Mar 21, 2019
recommend
very good training, useful knowladge
Marcin Kępka
Read full review
Mar 20, 2019
Valuable PSM II Workshops
Small group of participants who are guided by experienced trainer. Vital excercises and questions which allow to be a better Scrum Master.
Agnieszka Z
Read full review
Courses taught by Andy
Other Services by Andy
- Coaching/Consulting
- Immersion Classes
- Private Courses
Upcoming Classes by Andy
See all upcoming classes
Live Virtual
Date: Mar 6-8, 2024
Language: Polish
Class Format: Traditional
9:00 AM - 3:00 PM Europe/Warsaw
Live Virtual
Date: Apr 18, 2024
Language: Polish
Class Format: Traditional
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM Europe/Warsaw
Live Virtual
Date: May 22-24, 2024
Language: Polish
Class Format: Traditional
9:00 AM - 3:00 PM Europe/Warsaw
Live Virtual
Date: Jun 12-14, 2024
Language: Polish
Class Format: Traditional
9:00 AM - 3:00 PM Europe/Warsaw
Latest Blogs by Andy
See all blogs
Dear Scrum Master!
Being a Professional Scrum Trainer, agile coach & consultant for a while I had a chance to work with around a thousand Scrum Masters across different organizations. I see recurring patterns of misunderstanding and misapplication of Scrum usually visible in how Scrum Masters act. Based on that experience I want to share a couple of important points with you in hope that you will seriously consider them in your work.
1. You are not a boss. Repeat: You are not a manager. Repeat: You are not a foreman.
Specifically you are not responsible for making sure the team delivers everything that was planned during the Sprint Planning. You are not responsible for gathering reports and coordinating work to meet deadlines. You are not responsible for ensuring everyone chimes in, so you are not responsible for checking if people are working hard enough nor handling laggards. You are not responsible for distributing work nor ensuring it is distributed fairly and in a way that makes best use of the talents and skills of your team.
Your responsibility is nurturing, creating a team that would care for most of the above and more. This is a huge difference.
A good analogy is that of a sports coach. During a match all a coach can do is watch from the bench. He is responsible for creating a team that will play the game, not directing each and every player once the game starts. In the end it is the team that is responsible for winning, not the coach.
2. None of the meetings in Scrum are for you. You are not supposed to be the center of attention at any one of them.
Specifically, the Daily Scrum is not a reporting session, if you stand in the center and everyone else looks at you as they talk you’re doing it wrong. Also, the Sprint Review is not about showing team statistics and burndown charts. It is about showing a working product to the clients. Did I mention you’re not supposed to be the center of attention? That also applies to the Sprint Review, you shouldn’t be the one doing most of the talking — at best you should be the one doing the minimal moderation (that is keeping the meeting focused and effective) while the Product Owner and the team host the stakeholders, present their work and gather feedback.
If in doubt what Daily Scrum or Sprint Reviews are for re-read the Scrum Guide or attend a training led by a qualified, experienced trainer from a reputable Scrum organization (as of now this means Scrum.org or Scrum Alliance).
3. You are also not a "Scrum Secretary".
The fact that the team “does Scrum” and you have been elected/nominated/duped into being its Scrum Master doesn’t automatically mean that you should draw burndowns, move cards around on the board and keep other “Scrum artifacts” up to date. You may choose to do some or all of those things for a while, especially with a new, inexperienced team, but never ever allow the team to think this is your job as a Scrum Master.
Doing that might give them the false idea that all those artifacts are for you — or the process, the management etc. — while in fact they are all for them, the team sprinting to reach the Sprint Goal. You are there to help them realize that.
4. You are also not a technical leader or an architect.
You might be a brilliant programmer with lots of experience on the product, but being a Scrum Master doesn’t give you any authority to decide how the product is going to be designed & built. Specifically, as a Scrum Master it is not your duty to do code reviews or (worse) approve code or designs, answer technical questions or make any technical decisions. Doing so would bring you very close to becoming a traditional lead programmer or technical lead and thus would prevent the team from healthy self-organization.
Yes, Scrum allows a person to be a Scrum Master and a developer at the same time in the same team. If that is the case you will have to carefully balance those two roles and make it absolutely clear to everyone and in every interaction whether you speak & act as the team’s Scrum Master or as one of the developers. This might turn out to be trickier than it seems on the surface. It may sometimes work, but in most cases the burden is too much for one person which is why it is not the encouraged model.
Sadly, many organizations have even made it into a standard thus in most cases denying themselves full benefits well functioning Scrum teams could have given them.
5. You are not the team's spokesperson, nor are you an information relay for the team.
As it was pointed out above the Scrum Master is coaching the team, protecting the team, nurturing the team and pushing it gently towards working better and smarter — but is not replacing the team in actually doing the work. Contrary to what some may think a development team’s work does not consist of just typing code into computers while drinking caffeine-rich drinks. It also involves communicating (preferably face to face) with others — teammates, other teams, the Product Owner, stakeholders, clients, users etc. — to first understand what and how to put into code. Very often when analyzing why things went wrong we discover it was because some people didn’t talk, didn’t communicate fast and early enough opting for sending an e-mail then forgetting about it or — worse — assumed this or that was ‘obvious’ and just went ahead based on that unfounded assumption.
Because communication is so important for the art of developing software in teams as a Scrum Master you should care about it. This means you should monitor this communication to make sure there is enough of it, encourage it (in most cases just reminding developers it is better to call or walk over and have a chat rather than typing an e-mail is sufficient) at the same time ensuring that the process is not ‘leaking’ (for example no new work is being pushed into the team outside of the Product Backlog and PO’s knowledge). However, it is the team’s responsibility to communicate — it is them communicating, not you. Therefore you should never ever step in to act as a relay.
So, if everyone who wants to get some information to or out of the team comes to talk to you, the Scrum Master, you’re doing it wrong. Get out of the way before too much harm is done.
CONCLUSION
There are of course other misunderstandings and dysfunctions, but the ones above are by far the most common. If any of the points above is not obvious for you please do rethink whether your stance as a Scrum Master — or what is considered standard in your organization — is indeed beneficial and in line with what Scrum calls for. In other words whether you are a Scrum Master — or is it just a title you have in your e-mail signature.
Yours truly,
Andy Brandt
Mar 26, 2015
Andy's Certifications
Professional Scrum Trainer
Professional Scrum Master I
Professional Scrum Master II
Professional Scrum Master III
Professional Scrum Product Owner I
Professional Scrum Product Owner II
Professional Scrum Product Owner III
Professional Scrum Developer I
Scaled Professional Scrum
Professional Agile Leadership I
Professional Agile Leadership - Evidence-Based Management
Professional Scrum with Kanban I
Professional Scrum Facilitation Skills
Classes Attended by Andy
Professional Agile Leadership - Essentials
Trainers:
Ron Eringa, Laurens Bonnema
Partner:
Xebia
Date:
Feb 10-11, 2020
Professional Agile Leadership - Evidence Based Management
Trainers:
Mark Wavle, Chris Conlin
Date:
Jul 7-8, 2021
Professional Scrum Facilitation Skills
Trainers:
Glaudia Califano, David Spinks
Partner:
Red Tangerine
Date:
Jul 25, 2022
By using this site you are agreeing to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Service