The remote estimation challenge
Estimation is hard enough when everyone is in the same room. Move the session online and the difficulties multiply. Body language disappears, side conversations happen in chat instead of naturally, and the loudest voice in the call can anchor the entire group without anyone noticing.
Time zones add another layer of complexity. When half the team is ending their day while the other half is just starting, energy levels and focus vary wildly. Distractions at home — notifications, deliveries, pets — compete for attention in ways a meeting room never did.
The good news is that planning poker was practically designed for these challenges. Its core mechanic — simultaneous, hidden voting followed by structured discussion — neutralizes anchoring bias and gives every participant an equal voice, regardless of location or seniority.
Why planning poker works remotely
The technique's structure compensates for the lack of physical proximity.
Enforces simultaneous voting
Hidden votes are revealed together, so no one can be influenced by a colleague who votes first. This is critical when you cannot read the room.
Structured discussion rounds
After the reveal, the highest and lowest estimators explain their reasoning. This format keeps remote discussions focused and productive.
No physical cards needed
Everyone votes from their own device — laptop, tablet, or phone. There is nothing to ship, share, or set up in a conference room.
Built-in anchoring prevention
Online tools hide all votes until the facilitator reveals them, eliminating the biggest bias risk in remote estimation sessions.
Best practices
Six habits that keep remote estimation sessions productive and focused.
Use video for discussion
Turn cameras on during discussion rounds. Seeing faces helps convey context and tone that text chat cannot replace.
Keep sessions under 60 minutes
Remote attention fades fast. Estimate a focused set of stories and schedule a second session if the backlog is large.
Prepare stories in advance
Share the backlog items before the session so the team can review acceptance criteria and come ready to vote.
Time-box each story (3-5 min)
Set a visible timer for each item. If the team cannot converge, flag the story for a follow-up and move on.
Use a dedicated estimation tool
Generic chat polls lack simultaneous reveal and automatic stats. A purpose-built tool like Scrum Poker keeps the process honest.
Follow up on unresolved items
If a story cannot be estimated due to unknowns, assign a spike or research task and revisit it in the next session.
Setting up a remote session
Six steps from room creation to a team-agreed estimate.
Create a room in Scrum Poker
Open Scrum Poker and create a new estimation room. Choose your preferred card scale and set any session options.
Share the link with your team
Copy the room link and paste it into your team chat or calendar invite. No sign-up is required for participants.
Present each story and discuss
The product owner reads the story aloud over video while the team asks clarifying questions before voting.
Everyone votes simultaneously
Each team member selects their estimate card privately. The tool tracks who has voted without revealing values.
Reveal and discuss outliers
All cards flip at once. If estimates differ significantly, the high and low voters share their reasoning.
Converge and move to next story
Re-vote if needed until the team aligns. Record the agreed estimate and proceed to the next backlog item.
Common challenges and solutions
Practical fixes for the most frequent remote estimation pitfalls.
Silent participants
Use round-robin prompts after each reveal. Ask each person by name to share their perspective before re-voting.
Anchor bias
Enforce hidden votes that are only revealed once everyone has submitted. Never allow open discussion of numbers before voting.
Time zone conflicts
Record decisions and rationale in writing. If no overlap exists, consider asynchronous estimation with a discussion window.
Context switching
Batch estimation sessions so the team can focus. Group related stories together to reduce cognitive load between items.
Frequently asked questions
You need a tool that supports simultaneous voting and automatic reveal. Scrum Poker is a free online tool built for this — your team joins via a link, votes in real time, and all cards are revealed together.
Use a tool with hidden votes that are only revealed when everyone has voted. This is the core mechanic of planning poker and is even more important remotely where social cues are harder to read.
Schedule sessions during overlapping work hours. If no overlap exists, consider asynchronous estimation where team members vote within a time window and discuss outliers in the next meeting.
After revealing votes, the highest and lowest estimators explain their reasoning via video or voice. Keep discussions focused — use a timer if needed. Many teams find remote discussions more structured than in-person.
Yes, and often more so. Online tools enforce simultaneous voting (preventing anchoring), automatically calculate averages, and keep a record of estimates. The structure compensates for the lack of physical proximity.
Continue reading
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