A Scrum Master’s thoughts served up as bubbles.

One blog post at a time.

Featured Article
  • AI Won’t Replace Scrum Masters — But It Will Replace Bad Meetings

    Concerns about AI replacing Scrum Masters arise frequently, but the true impact lies in AI’s capability to enhance Agile processes by optimizing meetings. AI can streamline administrative tasks, allowing Scrum Masters to focus on solving systemic issues within teams. This shift emphasizes improving team dynamics over maintaining traditional ceremonies.

Latest Articles
  • Fire Hazards

    Fire Hazards

    Once upon a time there was a team of dedicated, intelligent, passionate developers and QA engineers who worked on XYZ platform at ABC company. Every…

  • Back to Basics Series – Principle 1

    Our highest priority is to satisfy the customer through early and continuous delivery of valuable software. https://agilemanifesto.org/principles.html What Does It Mean? There are many interpretations…

  • Back to Basics – Overview

    About a year ago, Atlassian took to Twitter with their #RetroOnAgile campaign and asked followers to tweet something they liked and something they wished about…

  • Recommendation of the Week

    Sales Driven Development – I wish I had time to write a post about this, but Marcus Blankenship’s article will do.

About Me

I’m an Agile leader, coach, and systems thinker who has spent my career helping teams and organizations work better together.

Over the years, I’ve led Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches across large product and technology organizations, focusing on improving delivery predictability, flow, and the systems that surround teams—not just the ceremonies they run.

I write Scrumbubbles to explore the realities of modern Agile: where it works, where it struggles, and how teams can move beyond frameworks toward truly adaptive organizations.

My perspective is grounded in years of hands-on experience helping teams improve how they plan, collaborate, and deliver value in complex environments.

Scrumbubbles is a place where I challenge assumptions, share patterns from the field, and experiment with better ways of working.