Catch up on all the sessions from Collaborate 2023, now available on demand. Watch now

Sprint Planning Template

Structure your iteration cycles and provide your Agile team with focused objectives using this sprint planning template.
  • Use this guide to build the template in Wrike.
<p>Sprint Planning Template</p>
#Agile Teams
#Software Development Teams
#Project Management Teams

Structure your sprints, prioritize work, and optimize your development cycles

In Agile, a sprint is one iteration in the development cycle. After the project requirements have been defined, sprints are planned to tackle different components of the project. Within a sprint, a specific amount of work is planned out, assigned, and put up for review. At the end of a sprint, a retrospective is held to review progress, update or adapt the process, assess performance, and make any necessary improvements or adaptations for the next planned sprint.

To plan your sprints in Wrike’s sprint planning template, start by creating your workflow with custom statuses depending on the steps in your production cycle. Next, create a custom request form to organize incoming work. Then create a dashboard to prioritize and assign incoming work. Lastly, use folders to archive past sprints and generate reports for your retrospectives.

Why you need this template

<h5>There are no clear owners of tasks</h5>
There are no clear owners of tasks

Use Wrike’s sprint planning template to assign owners to each task, creating accountability and follow‑through.

<h5>Focusing on too many things at once results in incomplete work</h5>
Focusing on too many things at once results in incomplete work

Use Wrike to plan sprints around a limited number of priorities to give focus and clarity to your team.

<h5>It’s difficult to have impactful retrospectives</h5>
It’s difficult to have impactful retrospectives

Document your sprints using our Agile sprint planning template. With all work and communication stored in the cloud, it’s easy to conduct impactful retrospectives.

<p>Ready to try this template in Wrike?</p>

Ready to try this template in Wrike?

Free 14-day trial, Easy setup, Cancel any time
<p>Ready to try this template in Wrike?</p>

How to build a sprint planning template

The guide will show you how to:

  • Create custom statuses for your workflow
  • Build a dynamic request form and dashboards to prioritize work
  • Report on completed sprints

Create custom statuses and build your workflow

  1. Select Account Management under your account profile, then click the Workflow tab
  2. Click + Create New Workflow and give your new workflow a name
  3. Hover your mouse over each section and add statuses. Include the following: Submitted, Accepted, In Progress, Ready for Review, Changes Needed, Completed, On Hold, and Canceled. (Your workflow may vary slightly, especially when it comes to your particular review and approval process.)
  4. Once you’re finished, click Save

Set up your folder

Create three new folders and make sure to share them with your team: a Backlog folder, a Sprint folder, and an Archive folder. Incoming work will be funneled into your Backlog folder, accepted or active tasks will be moved into your Sprint folder, and completed sprints should be moved into the Archive folder. Once a current sprint is completed, rename the folder by date and manually move into the Archive folder.

Build your request form

To help your team prioritize work for sprints, you’ll need to build a custom request form that captures all necessary details about the work or project.

  1. Go to your profile and select Account Management, then click the Request forms tab
  2. Create a new request form and make sure to include all the fields you’ll need to complete the work (i.e. requirements, due dates, goals, urgency, and business value). It’s also a good idea to include a field for a link to the task where the work will be done. (Once in the sprint, the Request task will act as a placeholder. Think of it like a sticky note you move across a whiteboard — it’s not where the actual work will be done.)

Create a dashboard to see your tasks

  1. Create a new dashboard and name it
  2. From your dashboard, click + New Widget, then Configure under Custom Widget. Name your widget and include tasks from your parent folder. Check the box Include tasks from subfolders. Under filters, select the first status in your sprint workflow
  3. Repeat for each step of your custom workflow to complete your Scrum dashboard

Dragging tasks between widgets will automatically update their status. However, if you drag items back into Submitted, make sure you also manually move the task to the Backlog folder.

Prepare for your retrospectives

At the end of each sprint, easily generate reports based on each sprint.

  1. Select the Reports tab from the top of the workspace
  2. Click + New Report From Scratch or select one of the Report templates
  3. Use Wrike’s Report Builder to specify the type of data you want to add to your report
  4. After setting your report’s parameters, click Save and View

You’ll be taken to your new report, and it will also be added to the top of the list of reports in the Reports section of your workspace.

Please note: To delete your report before it’s created, you can leave the Report Builder or click Cancel in the Report Builder’s upper-right corner.

FAQ

<p>Ready to try this template in Wrike?</p>

Ready to try this template in Wrike?

Free 14-day trial, Easy setup, Cancel any time
<p>Ready to try this template in Wrike?</p>

You might be interested in these templates

Sprint Planning resources

Case Study
Discover how Wrike brought irreplaceable efficiency to Fitbit’s launch process.
Case Study
Discover how Wrike helped this technology hardware company reduce Scrum periods by 80%.
eBook
7 Steps to Developing an Agile Marketing Team