Restaurants.<p>Usually just before opening or just before the dinner rush. You go over specials. assign sections, etc.<p>Construction.<p>Scrum is (allegedly) inspired by the morning briefing on a construction site where the electricians warn the plumbers they are going to turn on the power to floor X.<p>Military.<p>Before every mission and daily standing orders for officer of the day, officer of the watch etc.
Common in many kinds of operations, it's quite prevalent in operations management and embedded in lean and similar methodologies.<p>Here's an example, <a href="https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=rWg2oouZ2k0">https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=rWg2oouZ2k0</a>
You mean, a morning review routine?<p>Yes, in all my pre-diploma and summer jobs (not computer related: administration, woodwork, music publishing office, energy engineering office) in the 90’s.<p>Only, never as dogmatic and unproductive as the ones I’ve seen as scrum/agile mandated stuff.<p>Just a natural human focused status checking.
There's been some interesting comments here, but I have a hard time imagining every single person taking a turn in most of these systems. Scrum forcing everyone to make a commitment & report back in on it still seems fairly unique.