The "3 Amigos" in Agile Teams

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I think it was George Dinwiddie that first coined the term “3 Amigos” in agile development around 2009. The analogy was akin to the movie from the mid 90’s by the same name. The Amigos in the agile sense were functional roles:

  1. Developer(s);
  2. Tester(s);
  3. and the Business Analyst or the Product Owner.

It could literally mean more than three as well. The point was, balanced collaboration in agile teams across those three roles. George was alluding to these roles from an Acceptance Test Driven Development (ATDD) perspective. He wanted these three constituencies to be heavily collaborative (have conversations) around the Acceptance Tests or Acceptance Criteria for each user story.

In my classes, I literally explain this as an “extension” of agile team pairing—in that I’d prefer the pairs to be converted to “Triads” around each story.  Believe it or not, Ken Pugh leveraged the term Triad in his book on the same “ATDD-ish” driven topic (see the references).

3 Amigos Meeting

Recently I’ve heard of teams scheduling 3 Amigo style meetings as a part of grooming their backlogs. The idea is to create a checkbox for each user story where it has to be “3 amigo-ized” before it’s deemed ready for sprint execution.

I explored this notion of readiness in a previous blog post.

While I like this idea, and I certainly think making it a part of “Ready” is quite creative, I’m slightly troubled by the practice. I personally think the 3 Amigo’s analogy is less of a meeting and more of a collaborative mind-set.

So when do the “Amigos” meet?

Certainly they meet as part of Product Backlog development and grooming. I think that’s a given. But, I’d like to say continuously as well, for example:

  • Collaborating in the Sprint Planning meeting around how the stories fit into the Sprint and what the Sprint Review will look like from a cohesion perspective.
  • Chatting when each story is “first picked up” within the Sprint to ensure the team understands the nuance of the story and how to effectively design and test it.
  • During story development, the Amigos periodically check in together to ensure the story is on-track. Usually demo’s of partially completed code drive the discussions;
  • Once the story is complete, the Amigo’s gather around it and execute it. Going over acceptance criteria and other attributes, until the Product Owner is satisfied and “signs off on” the story;
  • But their role isn’t quite over. The Amigo’s play a strong part in demonstrating the story in the Review, gathering feedback, and digesting whether the story is truly complete. If so…they move onto the next, and the next, and…

What it’s not…

At the risk of “picking on” Jon Kruger, I want to use part of his description to make a point:

Outcomes

The primary outcome of the three amigos are acceptance tests written in format. Actually writing these out can take a little time, so we don’t do that with everyone sitting in a room. Typically a developer or a tester will work on it outside of the meeting, and once they have the scenarios all written out, then we do a quick review with everyone else that was involved in the original three amigos meeting to make sure that we all agree with what was produced.

I beg to differ slightly with Jon. His description is much more focused on the 3 Amigo’s as:

  • implying a meeting with specific, process-driven activity;
  • implying exhaustive scenarios, written in advance;
  • implying  a prescriptive format of Given-When-Then;
  • implying sign-off on acceptance tests, prior to the story entering the sprint.

While the meeting itself is good, what he and many others seem to miss is the mind-set part of the Amigo’s that is continuously happening around the team. Please don’t loose that focus in your thinking. And it certainly doesn’t have to use Given-When-Then format for every “conversation” 😉

Wrapping up

George, Ken and many others have struck on the collaborative power of these three roles within agile teams and their work. Don’t get caught up on it implying a meeting or any other ceremony, although those things may be outcomes of it.

Instead, consider it a role-based reminder of who needs to collaborate around the work that agile teams are producing continuously. Also think of it as a pairing surrounding sprint activity (the work) rather than a meeting-based activity (talking about the work). I think that was always the primary intent.

But please, do talk about “Amigos collaboration” early and often within your teams. The real point is that you’ll build better, more valuable, and more relevant software as a result. Now isn’t that something worth hollering about?

Stay agile my friends,

Bob.

Note: the picture can be found here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Healthywealthy.jpg

References

  • Ken Pugh’s book –
  • 2 references to the notion of a 3 Amigo’s Meeting:  , 
  • Video – George Dinwiddie: 
  • Podcast – George Dinwiddie: 
  • Article on Better Software in 2011, by George Dinwiddie: 

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Bob Galen

Bob Galen

Bob Galen is an Agile Methodologist, Practitioner & Coach based in Cary, NC. In this role he helps guide companies and teams in their pragmatic adoption and organizational shift towards Scrum and other agile methodologies and practices. Contact: [email protected]