
Sprints promise to accelerate development, but often do the opposite. Check out this alternative approach to building software.
Sprints promise to accelerate development, but often do the opposite. Check out this alternative approach to building software.
Richard Speed reports via The Register: A study has found that software projects adopting Agile practices are 268 percent more likely to fail than those that do not. Even though the research commissioned by consultancy Engprax could be seen as a thinly veiled plug for Impact Engineering methodology...
Planning poker, also called Scrum poker, is a consensus-based, gamified technique for estimating, mostly used for timeboxing in Agile principles. In planning poker, members of the group make estimates by playing numbered cards face-down to the table, instead of speaking them aloud. The cards are revealed, and the estimates are then discussed. By hiding the figures in this way, the group can avoid the cognitive bias of anchoring, where the first number spoken aloud sets a precedent for subsequent estimates.
Unsure of what a word means and how it applies to UX in-practice? Use this glossary to quickly clarify key terms and Agile concepts.
Introduction: The software development process has been transformed by the DevOps...
Agile is made up of 12 guiding principles that serve as the foundation for project teams. These...
The scaled agile framework (SAFe) is a set of organization and workflow patterns intended to guide enterprises in scaling lean and agile practices.[1][2] Along with disciplined agile delivery (DAD) and S@S (Scrum@Scale), SAFe is one of a growing number of frameworks that seek to address the problems encountered when scaling beyond a single team.[3][4]
Principles built into Lean UX don’t exist in SAFe. Continuous learning and improvement, customer centricity, humility, cross-functional collaboration and more.
Run effective SAFe ceremonies with these tips for release train engineers.
Make the best choice for your Agile team with this scaling framework overview.
Agile methodologies theory, practice, examples, and free templates for product development and product management teams.
A way to communicate, quantify, validate, and design for a Job to be Done