What is backlog grooming (and when you should do it)?
Backlog grooming, which is also known as backlog refinement, plays a pivotal role in ensuring that you can execute your projects and their component tasks with ease. What exactly is backlog grooming, and why is it crucial in agile methodologies? Learn how to take a look at previous tasks and handle them before the backlog builds up too much and causes more inefficiencies.

What is backlog grooming?
In any project, there will be plenty of tasks that will be scheduled, prioritized, or eventually put to the wayside to focus on other tasks that crop up in project management. In this case, backlog grooming refers to the process of reviewing, refining, and prioritizing items that might accumulate in a project’s backlog. This backlog will comprise an ever-changing list of tasks that might be on hold because of other elements that might appear during the course of a project.
If a project’s backlog isn’t regularly updated, team members may find it challenging to prioritize work and focus on what’s important. Therefore, backlog grooming is an iterative process: it involves refining and reordering items that have otherwise been put on the back burner, reevaluating them, and ensuring that they are well-defined, achievable, and aligned with project goals.
Key tasks for backlog grooming include the following:
- Prioritization: Items in the backlog are ranked based on their importance and urgency to the project.
- Removing redundancy: Team members remove duplicate, outdated, or completed items in order to streamline the backlog.
- Estimation: Team members and project managers collaborate to rank tasks by their complexity and relative, in order to facilitate planning, scheduling, and resource allocation.


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Learn moreWhy does backlog grooming matter?
Backlog grooming ensures that the development team has a clear understanding of what needs to be accomplished, reducing ambiguity, and fostering better collaboration. By regularly refining the backlog, teams can adapt to changing requirements, ultimately leading to enhanced productivity and customer satisfaction.
Ideally, backlog grooming sessions occur throughout the project lifecycle. However, the frequency may vary based on the project’s size, complexity, and team dynamics. Typically, teams conduct backlog grooming sessions:
- Weekly or bi-weekly sessions: to maintain backlog relevance and readiness for upcoming sprints.
- Before sprint planning: Ensuring the upcoming sprint backlog is well-prepared, refined, and aligned with project goals.
- As needed: Ad hoc sessions to address sudden changes, new requirements, or emerging priorities.
How to do backlog grooming effectively
In an agile team, the goal of backlog grooming is to break down large tasks into smaller, manageable ones for easier estimation and implementation. Use established criteria to prioritize backlog items based on business value and urgency.
It’s important to involve all stakeholders—developers, product managers, and relevant team members—to gain diverse perspectives when revisiting and updating the backlog. And in order to reflect evolving project needs, it’s vital to keep backlog items well-documented, so that team members can see what’s on their plate quickly at a glance.
Work projects can be complicated and unwieldy, but with organizational tips like backlog grooming, time management principles, and decision-making techniques, you can break down these tasks into manageable, bite-sized chunks.
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