The Priority Stack
Scope negotiation
This is the moment you've been building toward. Making the case for tech debt work when stakeholders only see features — except now the stakes are real and there's no rehearsal. What you do next matters.
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Part of this story
The Overloaded Sprint
→The sprint that's already overloaded, the tech debt nobody wants to address, the estimation that turns into an argument, and the sustainable pace everyone talks about but nobody practices. Navigate the overloaded sprint in this interactive journey.
Part of the quest
Sprint Planning Conflicts
→The sprint that's already overloaded, the tech debt nobody wants to address, the estimation that turns into an argument, and the sustainable pace everyone talks about but nobody practices. Navigate agile conflicts with real solutions.
What you'll learn from The Priority Stack
This scenario focuses on Scope negotiation — a critical skill inside the broader technology domain. You'll face a decision where the instinctive response is often the wrong one. After you make your choice, you'll see exactly what happened in the other person's head and why it mattered. The scenario is part of The Overloaded Sprint, a full interactive story inside the Sprint Planning Conflicts quest.
Skills you'll build in Sprint Planning Conflicts
More scenarios in this quest
The board is already full and the PM just added six more tickets. You stare at the sprint and do the math — there are five engineers and twelve weeks of work crammed into two.
What started with the overloaded sprint just got more complicated. Now you need to negotiate sprint capacity with data instead of emotion — and the situation is shifting faster than your first approach can handle.
You've faced the hardest part. Now turn what you've learned into something sustainable — a way to negotiate sprint capacity with data instead of emotion not just today, but every time this situation returns.
Ready to practice Scope negotiation?
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