Agile Glossary

Team

What is Team?

A “team” in the Agile sense is a small group of people, assigned to the same project or effort, nearly all of them on a full-time basis. A small minority of team members may be part-time contributors or may have competing responsibilities.

The notion of a team entails shared accountability: good or bad, the outcomes should be attributed to the entire team rather than to any individual.

The team is expected to possess all of the necessary competencies, whether technical (programming, designing, testing) or business (domain knowledge, decision-making ability).

Roles and responsibilities do not matter as much as results: a developer may test, perform analysis or think about requirements; an analyst or domain expert can suggest ideas about implementation, and so on.

Common Pitfalls

  • the most elementary error is to equate “group” and “team”, to think that a team results automatically from having people work together
  • a team should have at least three people (two is a pair), and will generally not exceed ten or so
  • a single person may be a contributor to more than one “project” simultaneously, but it is highly unlikely that they will consider themselves as belonging to more than one “team” at the same time

Origins

  • 2004: Kent Beck proposes “Whole Team” as the new denomination for the practice previously known as “On Site Customer”

Academic Publications

Tuckman’s conceptual model (“norming, forming, storming, performing”) is probably the most often cited with respect to the dynamics of Agile teams.

However, several competing and more recent models exist. One study specifically concerned with software teams found suggestive empirical validation of their TWQ (Teamwork Quality) framework as a factor correlated with project outcomes; the TWQ construct is composed of Communication, Coordination, Balance of Member Contributions, Mutual Support, Effort and Cohesion.

Thank you to our Annual Partners​

Join us today!

Agile Alliance offers many online and in-person events and workshops for our members. If you’re not currently a member, you can join now to take advantage of our many members-only resources and programs. LEARN MORE >

Get the latest Agile news!

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

By subscribing, you acknowledge the Agile Alliance Privacy Policy, and agree to receive our emails.

Additional Agile Glossary Terms

In the context of software development, build refers to the process that converts files and other assets under the developers' responsibility into a software product in its final or consumable form. The build is automated when these steps are repeatable, require no direct human intervention, and can be performed at any time with no information other than what is stored in the source code control repository.
An Agile team frequently releases its product into the hands of end users, listening to feedback, whether critical or appreciative.
Backlog grooming is when the product owner and some, or all, of the rest of the team refine the backlog on a regular basis to ensure the backlog contains the appropriate items, that they are prioritized, and that the items at the top of the backlog are ready for delivery.
Scrum is a process framework used to manage product development and other knowledge work. Scrum is empirical in that it provides a means for teams to establish a hypothesis of how they think something works, try it out, reflect on the experience, and make the appropriate adjustments. That is, when the framework is used properly.
Three amigos refers to the primary perspectives to examine an increment of work before, during, and after development. Those perspectives are: Business - What problem are we trying to solve? Development - How might we build a solution to solve that problem? Testing - What about this, what could possibly happen?
Continuous Integration is the practice of merging code changes into a shared repository several times a day in order to release a product version at any moment. This requires an integration procedure which is reproducible and automated.

Help us keep the definitions updated

Ready to join Agile Alliance?

Unlock members-only access to online learning sessions, Agile resources, annual conference discounts, and more! And when you join, you’ll be supporting our member initiatives, regional events, and global community groups.

Privacy Preference Center

IMPORTANT: We have transitioned to a new membership platform. If you have not already done so, you will need to SET UP AN ACCOUNT on the new platform to establish your user profile. Your previous login credentials will not work until you do this set up.

When you see the login screen, choose “Set up Account” and follow the prompts to create your new account. You can choose to log in using your social credentials for either Google or Linkedin (recommended), or you can set up your account using an email address.