Emphatically, yes.
Startup stage companies face a different set of problems. Organizational inefficiency is not one of them. There is not bureaucracy to slow you down. There are not so many people that coordination is difficult. But efficiency is still a concern.
Most startups face both the "too much work" and the "shifting priorities" problems. Scrum helps with both of these by placing everything into a single priority queue. We opted for one across all products. The backlog also allows for management of shifting priorities. As a bonus, if you track your velocity you will have a good idea of when the product will be ready to ship.
Thankfully there was little resistance (none) to implementing Scrum here. There is a little uncertainty as to if it's actually needed. As my sales pitch I put it that scrum is essentially exactly how we are working anyway (read: little to no overhead), but helps us prioritize and focus.
We're now in our second cycle. Big winner points:
- Backlog (priority queue) for tracking progress
- Planning game (story point estimation)
- Sprint Demo to stakeholders
- Velocity tracking (and long-term release planning)
- Daily standup
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