# How to Use the F-Factor Philosophy to Create Effective Team Ceremonies in Entertainment Marketplace (1/19)
An entertainment marketplace company with 850 employees runs FDD on a 12-person team building a new artist discovery engine. The team ceremonies are broken. The daily standup alone takes 45 minutes per day, costing the team roughly 3 hours per week. That lost time delays feature delivery, which causes the platform to fall behind competitors. Musicians leave. Venues follow. Last quarter, the lost transaction revenue hit $145,000 (2/19)
. That was 27% of the artist discovery engine's quarterly revenue.
Ingvar Kamprad built IKEA on a philosophy he called the F Factor. His insight was simple: the biggest threat to delivering value is the tendency to make everything complicated. Kamprad's answer was a single principle — formulate few, favor focused, find faster. Apply that principle to team ceremonies and the waste disappears.
## The Core Principle (3/19)
Effective team ceremonies come from reducing their number, keeping each one focused, and finding faster ways to communicate. Kamprad didn't build productive meetings at IKEA by making them longer. He made them shorter. He gave each one a clear purpose and cut everything else. For this entertainment marketplace company, the math is straightforward. The 45-minute standup costs 3 hours per week. Those 3 hours cost the company $145,000 per quarter (4/19)
. The F Factor says: formulate few, favor focused, find faster. That eliminates the waste.
## Four Steps to Apply the F-Factor Philosophy
1. Formulate Few — Reduce Five Weekly Ceremonies to Three, Replace the Rest with Async Updates (5/19)
Kamprad kept processes simple at IKEA. Simple meant fast. Fast meant he could deliver value at lower cost. The same logic applies here. The team currently runs five ceremonies per week: daily standup (45 minutes), sprint planning (2 hours, biweekly), sprint review (90 minutes, biweekly), backlog refinement (1 hour, weekly), and retrospective (90 minutes, biweekly). (6/19)
Cut two. Eliminate backlog refinement because it overlaps with sprint planning. Eliminate the daily standup because 45 minutes is too long for a status meeting. Replace both with async written updates. Each team member writes a 5-minute daily update posted to a shared channel. The product owner writes a biweekly backlog update taking 15 minutes. The three ceremonies that remain are sprint planning, sprint review, and retrospective. (7/19)
After making this change, the team saved 4 hours and 5 minutes per week. Features started shipping on time. That shift alone saved the company $52,000 last quarter.
2. Favor Focused — Give Each Ceremony a Strict Timebox and One Clear Purpose
At IKEA, Kamprad kept meetings short and on track. Each meeting had one job. When it was done, the meeting ended. For the three remaining ceremonies, apply strict timeboxes and a single purpose for each one. (8/19)
Sprint planning gets 90 minutes. Its only purpose: select features for the next sprint and define acceptance criteria. Sprint review gets 45 minutes. Its only purpose: demo completed features and collect feedback. Retrospective gets 60 minutes. Its only purpose: identify one improvement action for the next sprint. (9/19)
The timeboxes are visible to the team during each ceremony. When time's up, the meeting ends. No exceptions. After applying these constraints, the team saved an additional 2 hours and 30 minutes per week and delivered features on time. That saved another $37,000.
3. Find Faster — Move Status Reporting to Writing, Keep In-Person Time for Decisions (10/19)
Kamprad found faster ways to do everything at IKEA. For this team, faster means replacing lengthy in-person discussions with async written updates for status reporting. Save in-person ceremonies for decisions only. (11/19)
Each team member writes a 5-minute daily update with three sections: what they did yesterday, what they're doing today, and blockers (zero or one). That's it. The update goes to a shared channel and the whole team is informed. No standup needed. That saves 45 minutes per day. (12/19)
In-person ceremonies stay for decisions. Sprint planning is a decision. Sprint review involves feedback that shapes next steps. Retrospective produces an action. Those deserve face-to-face time. Status reporting doesn't. After this change, the team saved 3 hours and 20 minutes per week. Another $31,000 recovered.
4. Iterate — Run a Feedback Loop Every Two Weeks to Rate and Improve the Ceremonies (13/19)
Kamprad kept improving IKEA by iterating constantly. The same applies here. Every two weeks, run a simple feedback loop. Rate each ceremony on a 1-to-5 scale. Rate the async updates the same way. Identify what's working and what isn't. Fix what isn't. (14/19)
Last quarter, the team ran the feedback loop six times. They found two problems. The sprint review was rated 3 out of 5 — not effective. They shortened it to 30 minutes and the next rating jumped to 4. The async updates were rated 2 out of 5 — not useful. They added a fourth section called Decisions needed and the rating rose to 4. Fixing those two problems saved an additional $24,000 in prevented late deliveries.
## Closing on Formulating Few Over Running Everything (15/19)
Kamprad didn't build IKEA by running every possible meeting and hoping they'd be productive. He built it by cutting meetings down, keeping each one focused on a single purpose, finding faster ways to communicate, and iterating on what remained. For this 12-person FDD team, the results of applying the F Factor speak for themselves. Ceremony reduction saved 4 hours and 5 minutes per week and $52,000. Strict timeboxes saved $37,000. Async updates saved $31,000 (16/19)
. The feedback loop saved another $24,000. (17/19)
Start by cutting the number of ceremonies this week. Give each remaining one a strict timebox and a single-sentence purpose. Replace status discussions with written updates. Rate everything every two weeks and fix what's broken. When the team leads do this, the 850-employee enterprise stops losing $145,000 per quarter on late feature delivery. One hundred years from now, companies will still be solving this the same way Kamprad did. Formulate few. Favor focused. Find faster. (18/19)