Hands on Deck Retrospective
Keep it shipshape with a retro to focus on team roles
What is a Hands on Deck retrospective?
The Hands on Deck retrospective meeting is a chance for you and your colleagues to share your strengths and challenges, so you can learn how to support one another. Itâs a chance to get real about what parts of work you love â and donât love â so you can keep your ship sailing bravely forward.
In this retrospective meeting, youâll imagine your team as a shipâs crew. It takes cooperation to keep your boat running smoothly â especially when you hit choppy waters!
Your team is so much greater than the sum of its parts. Itâs not just you and your teammatesâ skills that make you strong, itâs how they work together.
From captain to deck-hand, everyoneâs contribution matters. But which are you? This retrospective template will have you thinking about how you fit into 4 different, but equally important crew roles. All so you can explore your teamâs unique dynamic.
Whatever you learn about yourself and your agile team, remember to translate your insights into specific action items or documentation, so you can follow up and try out these roles!
Letâs set sail! Here are the prompts youâll need for an all Hands on Deck sprint retrospective.
Captain đ¨ââď¸
Brainstorm which areas of your job you feel most confident in. Where are you itching to step into a leadership role? What are you best at? What type of work do you enjoy the most?
Would you be comfortable directing others and taking responsibility for the outcome? As Captain, you can leverage your expertise to deliver amazing results for everybody.
Example: I really love compiling all our analytics insights into a monthly report. Itâs so satisfying to figure out how we can use that data to actually do things better.
First Mate â
What tasks do you want to support closely, but without quite taking the lead?
These could be areas youâre interested in, and want to learn more about. As first mate, you can develop skills youâd like to pursue in the future.
Youâre second in command to the captain and can back them up if theyâre out of office. Or you can shadow the captain to improve your skills.
Example: Running retrospectives seems like a lot of fun. Iâm not ready to be the facilitator, but one day, Iâd like to be able to.
Navigator đ§
Which seas would you like to steer clear of? Are any big icebergs on your horizon?
Even if you still need to do those things sometimes, itâs good to check in about what you don’t like or what drains your energy. A team member might have a complementary strength, and that gives them a chance to step in.
Example: Scheduling is not my favorite. I like managing people, but juggling shifts feels tedious.
Deck-scrubber đ§˝
What are the things you donât mind helping out with? Theyâre not necessarily your strong suit or something you enjoy. But theyâre necessary. What things are you ready to roll up your sleeves and scrub the deck for, port to starboard?
Maybe these are things you did earlier in your career, but have since progressed past. Or perhaps theyâre just tasks you find a bit dull, but still have a solid understanding of.
Example: Fixing bugs is pretty tiresome, but I know how to get into a good routine. Let me know if you need help taking care of a problem.
When to do a Hands on Deck retrospective
Between projects
This agile retrospective focuses on who your team is, rather than what you do.
That means itâs best used to evaluate how you work generally, not on a specific project. Continuous improvement isnât about just one week or sprint, itâs about the big picture.
Sometimes after working together for a while, itâs time to ask âwhat do you want to do more ofâ and âwhat do you want to do less ofâ. This retrospective helps people do more of the activities they want.
Pre- or post-hire
When youâre changing your teamâs structure, it makes sense to evaluate how you could work better.
Hands on Deck is perfect if youâre deciding what you need in a hire for, or even if you have an entirely new team! And if youâre welcoming someone new, you couldnât ask for a better icebreaker.
How to run a Hands on Deck Retrospective in Parabol
First things first, get Parabol for free. Then, when youâre in Parabol hit the add meeting button and choose a âretrospectiveâ meeting.
Select the Hands on Deck retrospective template
Jump into Parabol and select Retro Meeting with the arrows, then use the dropdown to select the Hands on Deck retrospective template. This is where youâll find Parabolâs library of 40+ pre-made and customizable retrospective formats.Â
Every Parabol retrospective begins with an optional icebreaker. This box is checked by default. You donât have to do one, but we recommend it â especially for remote teams.
Start your Hands on Deck retrospective with an Icebreaker
If youâre doing an icebreaker, youâll have a random question to answer. You can refresh it if you want another option, and of course you can create your own if you want.
Perhaps ask team members where theyâre drawing inspiration from right now?
After the icebreaker youâll move on to the reflect stage. This is where your team will do all their ideation and brainstorm in silence using the prompts above. All reflections are kept anonymous at this stage to prevent groupthink. Parabol gives Scrum Masters or meeting facilitators the option to timebox this process.
All Parabol sprint retrospectives can be run synchronously or asynchronously. Functionalities such as the timer, voting and multiplayer grouping help you make your retrospective exercise a success and make facilitation easier.
Reflect, Group, and Discuss topics based on the Hands on Deck prompts
Team members can all leave comments together, or do it at a time that works for them. Also, reflections are anonymous, and no one can see them until youâre done working on them.
After the reflect phase, youâll vote on issues to discuss, talk about the most voted on items, and follow up with action items for each process improvement so you can make it a reality.
Parabol will send a summary of the retro when youâre done so nobody needs to take notes.
Of course, you can do this team retrospective in person, with a whiteboard or sticky notes. But itâs even easier in Parabol, especially if youâre an asynchronous or distributed team.
If you like this template, you might also like other blended retrospective ideas that focus on role definition, such as the Energy Levels retrospective.