Empower Scrum Teams to make decisions
Scrum Teams lose valuable time waiting for someone else to make a decision. The more a Scrum Team is empowered to make decisions for itself, and the more they understand how they want to make decisions, the less time it will waste waiting for a decision, the more effective it is able to be, and the faster it will be able to go.
To understand how empowered teams are, consider decision latency (the amount of time that elapses from when a team needs to make a decision to when the decision is made and they can move forward). High decision latency signifies lower empowerment. It is also significant drain on a team’s effectiveness.
Empowerment to make decisions is not an all-or-nothing proposition: Scrum Teams need to earn the trust of managers by proving that they can make good decisions if permitted to do so. Building this trust usually starts with small and relatively inconsequential decisions and, if all goes well, progresses to more impactful decisions. Scrum Teams can help this by providing transparency into how they make decisions and what they achieve.
Resources:
Book: The Professional Agile Leader: The Leader's Journey Toward Growing Mature Agile Teams and Organizations (The Professional Scrum Series), by Ron Eringa, Kurt Bittner, and Laurens Bonnema; Addison-Wesley Professional, June 25, 2022, ISBN-13: 978-0137591510