About
About TheScrum.Guide
A practical Scrum reference built for people who want clear explanations, structured learning, and direct access to the concepts that matter.
About the creator
TheScrum.Guide was created by Agha Sameer, Chief Technology Officer at ZADIP Group, with 17 years of experience in software development, digital platforms, product delivery, and technology leadership.
Why this project exists
During my own Scrum certification journey, including Professional Scrum Master (PSM) and Certified ScrumMaster (CSM), I found a recurring gap: the official material was valuable, but many supporting references were either too abstract, too scattered, or too unnecessarily complex.
This project was built to close that gap — not by replacing the official Scrum Guide, but by making Scrum concepts easier to search, understand, remember, and apply.
What this site is designed to do
TheScrum.Guide explains Scrum events, accountabilities, artifacts, commitments, values, empiricism, transparency, inspection, adaptation, and widely used Agile practices in plain English. It is designed for certification candidates, Scrum Masters, Product Owners, Developers, Agile teams, and professionals who want a clearer working understanding of Scrum.
Why Scrum and Agile matter
Agile practices help teams respond to change, reduce wasted effort, improve collaboration, and deliver value earlier. Scrum supports this by creating short feedback cycles, clear goals, transparent work, regular inspection, and continuous adaptation.
Used well, Scrum helps teams move from heavy upfront prediction to evidence-based delivery — a better fit for complex product and software environments.
The goal
The goal is simple: make Scrum easier to learn without making it shallow. If this site helps someone pass a Scrum exam, perform better in an Agile team, or finally understand a concept that previously felt confusing, it has done its job.
Independence and attribution
TheScrum.Guide is an independent educational resource inspired by the official Scrum Guide by Ken Schwaber and Jeff Sutherland. It is not affiliated with Scrum.org, Scrum Inc., or the authors of the Scrum Guide.
Visit the official Scrum Guide