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    Velocity Tracking

    Agile metric measuring team's average amount of work completed per sprint, typically in story points. Used for capacity planning, forecasting, and identifying productivity trends over time.

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    About this tool

    Overview

    Velocity tracking is an agile practice that measures how much work a team completes in each sprint, typically measured in story points. It provides a baseline for planning future sprints and forecasting project completion dates.

    What is Velocity

    Velocity = Sum of story points for completed user stories in a sprint

    For example:

    • Sprint 1: 23 points completed
    • Sprint 2: 27 points completed
    • Sprint 3: 25 points completed
    • Average velocity: 25 points per sprint

    How to Calculate

    Per Sprint:

    1. Add up story points for all completed stories
    2. Only count fully "done" stories (not partially complete)
    3. Don't count carried-over work
    4. Record the total

    Average Velocity:

    • Calculate mean of last 3-5 sprints
    • More sprints = more stable average
    • Use for capacity planning
    • Adjust for team changes

    Uses of Velocity

    Sprint Planning:

    • Determine realistic sprint commitment
    • Avoid over/under-committing
    • Balance team capacity
    • Set achievable goals

    Forecasting:

    • Estimate completion dates
    • Calculate remaining sprints needed
    • Project roadmap timelines
    • Set stakeholder expectations

    Improvement Tracking:

    • Identify productivity trends
    • Measure impact of process changes
    • Assess team growth
    • Spot impediments early

    Best Practices

    • Track consistently across sprints
    • Don't compare velocity between teams
    • Use as planning tool, not performance metric
    • Account for team changes
    • Consider capacity variations (holidays, etc.)
    • Track over 3-5 sprints for stability
    • Don't artificially inflate velocity

    Common Mistakes

    • Using as performance measurement
    • Pressuring teams to increase velocity
    • Comparing different teams
    • Focusing on velocity over value delivered
    • Not adjusting for team size changes
    • Using first few sprints (unstable)

    Factors Affecting Velocity

    • Team size and composition
    • Team experience and skill
    • Technical debt
    • Process improvements
    • External dependencies
    • Sprint length
    • Definition of done consistency

    Tools for Tracking

    • Jira velocity charts
    • Azure DevOps analytics
    • Trello with power-ups
    • Spreadsheet tracking
    • Rally Software
    • VersionOne

    Related Metrics

    • Sprint burndown
    • Cumulative flow
    • Cycle time
    • Lead time
    • Throughput
    Surveys

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    Information

    Websitewww.atlassian.com
    PublishedMar 12, 2026

    Categories

    1 Item
    Practices

    Tags

    3 Items
    #Agile
    #Metrics
    #Forecasting

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