- 1. What Is the Scrum Methodology?
- 2. Guide to Scrum Sprints
- 3. Scrum Sprint Planning
- 4. The Complete Guide to Scrum Ceremonies
- 5. The Ultimate Guide to Sprint Retrospectives
- 6. Daily Scrum Meetings
- 7. Scrum of Scrums Meeting
- 8. Introduction to Scrum Team and Roles
- 9. What Is a Scrum Product Owner?
- 10. What Is a Scrum Master?
- 11. Best Scrum Software and Tools for 2023
- 12. A Complete Guide to Scrum Boards
- 13. Scrum Glossary
- 14. FAQs
- 1. What Is the Scrum Methodology?
- 2. Guide to Scrum Sprints
- 3. Scrum Sprint Planning
- 4. The Complete Guide to Scrum Ceremonies
- 5. The Ultimate Guide to Sprint Retrospectives
- 6. Daily Scrum Meetings
- 7. Scrum of Scrums Meeting
- 8. Introduction to Scrum Team and Roles
- 9. What Is a Scrum Product Owner?
- 10. What Is a Scrum Master?
- 11. Best Scrum Software and Tools for 2023
- 12. A Complete Guide to Scrum Boards
- 13. Scrum Glossary
- 14. FAQs
What Is a Scrum Sprint Cycle?
A Scrum sprint cycle is a timeboxed period when a team delivers a set amount of work. It is typically two to four weeks in duration and each sprint starts the moment the previous one is completed.
The Scrum sprint cycle is often referred to as a process of continuous development. It delivers a consistent work cadence for product releases and keeps the project’s momentum going until complete.
Stages of the Scrum sprint cycle
The official Scrum Guide mentions five events that represent the Scrum sprint cycle: sprint planning, daily scrum, sprint review, and sprint retrospective. The fifth one is the sprint itself — which is the container for the other four.
Here’s a little more about the events in a Scrum sprint cycle.
- Sprint planning - Kicking off the Sprint and defining what needs to be completed
- Daily Scrum - Developers meet for fifteen minutes every day to share what they have worked on, any issues blocking them, and what they will be working on next
- Sprint review - Evaluate what was delivered and decide what should be worked on in the next sprint
- Sprint retrospective - A review of the process to improve the next sprint
Development work is carried out between these milestones and is typically a more linear process comprising design, development, testing, and deployment, with team members working in parallel across different user stories.
Scrum sprint deliverables
The main deliverable is the increment — the planned update to the product. Success is measured in terms of the new features being shipped as well as the additional value that benefits the end-users.
Two events of the Scrum sprint cycle are dedicated to reviewing and feedback: the sprint review and sprint retrospective, where key learnings about the product and process ensure that the next iteration will be more successful.
Alex Zhezherau
Alex is Wrike’s Product Director, with over 10 years of expertise in product management and business development. Known for his hands-on approach and strategic vision, he is well versed in various project management methodologies — including Agile, Scrum, and Kanban — and how Wrike’s features complement them. Alex is passionate about entrepreneurship and turning complex challenges into opportunities.