Sprint planning is supposed to give you guardrails, clear, reasonable boundaries for what your team can actually deliver.
But in practice? Most teams commit to 20–40% more work than they have the capacity to complete.
Not because they’re lazy or bad at math—but because the system nudges them to do it.
Here’s what’s really driving overcommitment (and how to fix it):
1.Team members don’t feel safe pushing back.
Create space for it. Mid-meeting, ask:
“On a scale of 1–5, how confident are you in this plan?”
Anything under a 4? Talk about it—before stories get locked in.
2.You’re measuring story points, not outcomes.
Switch from "velocity targets" to clear sprint goals.
Like: “Improve checkout conversion by 15%.”
Then list the work tied directly to that outcome.
3. You reward volume, not focus.
Flip the script. Celebrate teams that protect their time.
Try a “Capacity Champion” shoutout in retros.
Recognition matters, especially for nailing sprint outcomes.
4. Leadership derails the sprint mid-flight.
Get their buy-in before planning.
Urgent request? Fine. But it needs to be escalated the right way.
5. You need micro rituals to reinforce this.
Sprint culture fades without repetition.
Add these weekly nudges:
🟣Week 1: Retro highlight, how saying no helped
🟣Week 3: Mid-sprint confidence check (again, 1–5)
Want to make this stick?
Run a collaborative capacity workshop.
(Yes, the name is boring. The impact isn’t.)
Do this:
We have gone deeper into these in the full article: https://www.rallybetter.com/blog/why-agile-teams-overcommit-and-how-to-fix-it/?utm_source=linkedin&utm_medium=rally_social
Evan Fishman - Rally for Jira
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