I had just stepped into a completely new role, Scrum Master. New team, new expectations, and a craft I was still learning. I was still wrapping my head around the role, yet here I was expected to lead a team of seasoned professionals.
The team was a blend of experienced developers and sharp business minds people who had already acquired their craft and knew exactly what they wanted. Everyone, except me. I was still figuring out where the sticky notes were kept.
It was a retro day. The team had a culture of arriving early and so had most of them on this day. I was just about to swipe my card on the ground floor to summon the lift to the 5th when my phone rang. A new caller. I hesitated, then picked up. It was Stacy, my peer buddy. She casually said, “Nilikuwa nakuambia leo sikuji.” “Ni nani?” “Ni Stacy.” I froze. Of all days, why today?
I didn’t ask why she was absent. Empathy didn’t even cross my mind. All I could think was: “Retro is in minutes. I’ve never done one before. How do I even start?” The elevator seemed to double its speed, maybe it sensed my panic. I got to the 5th floor. The team was already seated. All eyes on me. My voice was the missing piece to get this running.
To make matters worse, I hadn’t even figured out where the sticky notes were stored. Yes, the very tools of the trade were missing in action. I stood there, clearly flustered, when one of the front-end engineer kind, observant, and probably a part-time mind reader, sensed my woes from a distance. He looked at me and asked, “Mwenzako hakuji?” I nodded, “No.” Without hesitation, he dashed to the lockers, pulled out a bunch of sticky notes and pens, and said, “Let’s use these.” That was my messiah of the moment. Or so I thought.
I stood there, heart racing, trying to remember everything I’d read about retrospectives. I didn’t have a script. I didn’t have a backup plan. But I had a team that was ready, a bunch of sticky notes, and a developer who had my back. So, I leaned in.
Truthfully, I can’t remember much about how the retrospective itself went. I doubt we had any structured format beyond the classic “What went well, what went wrong.” I fumbled. I made awkward jokes. No sugarcoating it. I was nervous, unsure, and probably said “let’s just go with the flow” more times than I should have.
But looking back, I’m glad I did it. That moment awkward, unpolished, and raw was necessary. It was the beginning of learning by doing. I didn’t need a perfect plan. I needed the experience. And that’s exactly what I got.
💡 Lessons Learned:
- Show up, even when you’re unsure. Leadership starts with presence, not perfection.
- Empathy is a muscle. I didn’t use it that day, but I’ve learned to since
- Lean on your team. Agile is collaborative help often comes from unexpected places.
- Don’t fear the fumble. Every misstep is a step toward mastery.
- Start simple. Even “What went well, what went wrong” can spark meaningful insights.
- Reflect often. Retrospectives aren’t just for the team they’re for you too.
That day taught me more than any Agile course ever could. It was messy, real, and transformative. I didn’t have all the answers honestly, I barely had the sticky notes, but I had the courage to show up, and the humility to learn in real time. And that, I’ve come to learn is the essence of Agile leadership.
Show up even when you are not sure, such a nice read.. I'm tuned in for the next
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