Agile Glossary

Story Mapping

What is Story Mapping?

Story mapping consists of ordering user stories along two independent dimensions. The “map” arranges user activities along the horizontal axis roughly in the order in which the user would perform the task. Down the vertical axis, user stories are ordered by priority and/or increasing sophistication of the implementation.

Given a story map so arranged, the first horizontal row represents a “walking skeleton“, a barebones but usable version of the product. Working through successive rows fleshes out the product with additional functionality.

Also Known As

User Story Mapping

Expected Benefits

One intent of this practice is to avoid a failure mode of incremental delivery, where a product could be released composed of features that in principle are of high business value but are unusable because they are functionally dependent on features that are of lower value and were therefore deferred to future releases.

Origins

Further Reading

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Additional Agile Glossary Terms

A Kanban Board is a visual workflow tool consisting of multiple columns. Each column represents a different stage in the workflow process.
Mock Objects (commonly used in the context of crafting automated unit tests) consist of instantiating a test-specific version of a software component.
An epic is a large user story that cannot be delivered as defined within a single iteration or is large enough that it can be split into smaller user stories.
The Given-When-Then formula is a template intended to guide the writing of acceptance tests for a User Story: (Given) some context, (When) some action is carried out, (Then) a particular set of observable consequences should obtain.
In software development, an "estimate" is the evaluation of the effort necessary to carry out a given development task; this is most often expressed in terms of duration.

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