Archive for the ‘scrum’ Category

RE09 keynote on agile and requirements

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Dave West gave the opening keynote speech today at RE09, titled “Delivering Business Value with Agile Approaches to Requirements”. The keynote description had definitely caught my attention, and I confirmed in a quick chat right before his talk that Dave was fresh from the Agile 2009 conference (he was sporting his Agile Alliance/Rally logo’d lanyard).

I took extensive notes on my laptop, but wasn’t able to ‘live blog’ – we’ve got free wireless, thanks to the conference organizers, but power connections are scarce. My battery’s not as good as it once was, and having the wireless on during the day today would have killed it. So I apologize for the delay in getting this post online, but hope you find it worth the wait!

In a nutshell, Dave delivered – he was entertaining and provided some hot-off-the-press stats on agile adoption. The only ‘promised’ topic which I didn’t feel was well addressed was how ‘formality and discipline play just as important role with Agile methods as with traditional approaches’, and it was a bit under the bar re ‘provide concrete recommendations on organizations can resolve the conflict and build a better requirements discipline’.  Everything else he covered was up to, or exceeded, my expectations. There were also some thoughtful questions from the RE09 audience in the limited time for Q&A.

Below are my detailed notes. Be advised that most of the percentages cited below are either subject to transcription errors, or were my approximations from reading column heights on a chart. Also, the bulleting is still a little rough/confusing, and I know I’ve used some personal abbreviations in here – with your permission and understanding, I’ll clean those up later.

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agile management tools

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

Even the most agile project likely uses some kind of tools – index cards, whiteboards, etc. I recently checked out a few agile project management tools to help me with a small, but globally distributed, project. (Without continuously-on high-powered video support across the oceans, whiteboards and index cards are just too hard for everyone on the team to see 😉) After a quick check of ThoughtWorks’ Mingle, Rally Development’s VersionOne, TargetProcess, and Pivotal Labs’ Tracker, I decided to try out Tracker for my team. My main reasons:

  • it’s free for our team size (under 5 people),
  • it’s hosted (zero installation effort, and provides easy access from anywhere for globally distributed teammates),
  • it’s reputed to be fairly simple and straightforward to use.

Although I’m all in favor of applying appropriate rigor (e.g. using a method like AHEAD) to software technology evaluations for which the business consequences warrant it, in this case, ‘doing the simplest thing that could possibly work’ didn’t appear to require anything sophisticated. I’ll post later on how well it works for us. I’d love to hear from anyone who has used them, or other tools, for similar geographically-distributed team situations.

growth

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

This blog has been quiet for a while, partly due to a shift in employer focus away from coaching agile, TSP, and CMMI, and towards research in requirements engineering, technology evaluation, and software architecture. I’m delighted to be reviving this blog now with the addition of new topics (including QFD, ADD, AHP, PrIME) and an outstanding new collaborator, Dr. Qingfeng He! It also seems likely that agile coaching activities will resume in the near future, based upon grass-roots demand for Scrum, which we’re excited about. Look for more new posts and publications here in the near future!

Scrum in China

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

Here’s an interesting InfoQ article on Scrum in China, for my agile-minded colleagues there 🙂

Scrum Meets CMMi

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

Excellent article from Dr. Dobbs Journal (Sept. 2007) on “Scrum Meets CMMi“, about the experiences of an SCM tool development company in Spain.

Scrum on YouTube

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

check out Mike Vizdos’ post and the chickens-and-pigs video he and his son created!

Scrum cartoons

Sunday, September 9th, 2007

hope you enjoy these – I did 🙂

11 Ways Agile Adoptions Fail

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

Excellent, brief article by Jean Tabaka on 11 ways agile adoptions “fail”.