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The "Painting by Numbers" Scrum Master vs. The Quiet Leader Who Made the Team Self-Sufficient | Njegos Ilic
Description
In this episode, we refer to the concepts of Scrum Master as facilitator and team empowerment.
The Bad Scrum Master: The "Painting by Numbers" Approach That Leaves Product Owners Working AloneRead the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.
"You basically feel totally alone because you are trying to deliver value as a team, but if nobody asks anything and nobody challenges anything, you end up defining everything yourself." - Njegos Ilic
Njegos describes the worst Scrum Master anti-pattern he's witnessed: the "painting by numbers" Scrum Master who runs every ceremony by the book — dailies, refinements, plannings, retros, reviews — but without understanding the purpose behind any of them. The meetings become a reporting cycle: "What did you do yesterday?" with no interaction, no challenging, no real engagement. From the product owner's perspective, this is devastating. Njegos describes feeling completely alone — trying to deliver value as a team while nobody engages, nobody asks questions, nobody pushes back on assumptions. The downstream effect is predictable: gaps that could have been caught early with a single conversation only surface during development or after deployment. Worse, the lack of engagement creates doubt and overthinking — the product owner starts over-defining requirements because there's no feedback loop, which reinforces the very passivity that caused the problem.
Self-reflection Question: Are the ceremonies on your team creating genuine engagement and learning — or have they become a reporting cycle that nobody actually needs?
The Great Scrum Master: The Quiet, Impactful Leader Who Made the Team Self-SufficientRead the full Show Notes and search through the world's largest audio library on Agile and Scrum directly on the Scrum Master Toolbox Podcast website: http://bit.ly/SMTP_ShowNotes.
"The best Scrum Masters I worked with were invisible — they knew always when to speak, they sensed the pulse of the team, and they weren't afraid to jump in when needed." - Njegos Ilic
The best Scrum Masters Njegos has worked with share a common trait: they were almost invisible. They didn't dominate meetings or insert themselves where they weren't needed. But they were always present — sensing the team's pulse, knowing when to step in, unafraid to say "we're out of time, let's take this offline." They were knowledgeable about the product, which earned them genuine respect from developers. And perhaps most powerfully, they delegated facilitation itself. Njegos shares an example where a Scrum Master introduced a round-robin system: when new developers joined the team, everyone took turns facilitating meetings — planning, retros, dailies. This wasn't just del