There is a huge difference between using Agile practices and being Agile. Here, a chief engineer discusses his organization’s strides in creating an Agile mindset and a customized approach to producing high-quality work in short time frames. The journey offers practical advice and techniques to those getting started or struggling with Agile transformation.
As Kanban is applied to longer projects up to three months in duration, the principles of visibility, flow, variability and improvement are still in full effect, but challenges must be taken into account, including larger teams and higher-level sponsors, increased uncertainty and complexity, and, by extension, greater organizational pressures.
For any and all projects you lead, a constant mantra should be “keep the stakeholders involved.” It will help you to get ahead of potential risks and changes to scope as your project moves towards completion, and it will be critical to its ultimate success. When in doubt, overcommunicate.
Vincent M: "EVM requires a baseline plan to measure progress against. For Scrum you could ge…" on Agile + Earned Value
February 3, 2012
Chris W: "This is a very interesting topic especially since I am in the trenches of tradit…" on Agile + Earned Value
February 3, 2012
Andreea T: "Very interesting article that presents the essence of complex adaptive systems! …" on Mastering the Unpredictable
February 3, 2012
haresh t: "Nice article .. Its all about knowing the team members, their roles and more imp…" on The No-Drama PM
February 3, 2012