Here's a template that I've used to help me write stories, although never used in its entirety. Mostly to gather ideas and remind myself to think of criteria. Certainly want to build "Small user stories – easier realisation."
Do any of you use a "template" or similar strategy to write better stories?
--
h2. As who I want what so that why. or "Hierarchy > of the > item to address" (for example)
Which epic?
* Epics, or non-functional User Stories…
DoD (Definition of Done)
* https://www.leadingagile.com/2017/02/definition-of-done/
A good user story should be:
* "I" ndependent (of all others)
* "N" egotiable (not a specific contract for features)
* "V" aluable (or vertical)
* "E" stimable (to a good approximation)
* "S" mall (so as to fit within an iteration)
* "T" estable (in principle, even if there isn't a test for it yet)
And is it ready? https://www.leadingagile.com/2015/07/definition-of-ready/
Common mistakes: https://www.scrumalliance.org/community/articles/2011/august/5-common-mistakes-we-make-writing-user-stories
h3. Acceptance Criteria
* given…, when…, then…
FYI: https://www.leadingagile.com/2014/09/acceptance-criteria/
h3. QA / Qualification
# URL
#* asdf
# Role
#* asdf
# Steps
#*
h3. Regression potential
* Check…
h3. Assets
* asdf
h3. Documentation
* In Confluence…
---
Thank you!
Recommended Learning For You
Level up your skills with Atlassian learning
Learning Path
Apply agile practices
Transform how you manage your work with agile practices, including kanban and scrum frameworks.
Learning Path
Configure agile boards for Jira projects
Learn how to create and configure agile Jira boards so you can plan, prioritize, and estimate upcoming work.
Jira Essentials with Agile Mindset
Suitable for beginners, this live instructor-led full-day course will set up your whole team to understand how to use Jira with an agile methodology.