Implement Agile Practices That Work

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Implement Agile Practices That Work Deliver on time and improve communication with the business to minimize project failure. View Infographic Add to Library Forward 1 Last Revised: May 9, 2014 View Storyboard Your Challenge The Agile evangelists are having trouble converting others to the Agile philosophy. Your team is facing pressure to deliver projects in a smaller time frame. The Waterfall approach is causing projects to go over budget, misunderstanding of project owners’ expectations, and late delivery to the end-customer. Projects that get implemented successfully may be susceptible to problems as the software gets older and crucial changes are too expensive. A consolidation roadmap that is based on an easy-to-implement method will ease the burden on resource and infrastructure maintenance. Our Advice Critical Insight Agile is not suitable for all organizations, or all projects. Carefully select pilot projects that have the greatest chance of success and determine the right requirements or risk significant cost overruns to fix problems or roll back development. An Agile rollout may require peripheral projects to be accelerated. Agile will modify internal roles and processes. Get ready for change management. Impact and Result Agile will improve communication and transparency between teams and stakeholders, which will lead to higher quality products and fluid team dynamics. The success of the Agile pilot should be used to build the case for an organizational-wide deployment. In order for your organization to stay competitive, it must place focus on delivering projects at a quicker pace with the right features. Contributors Amerinet Pacific Blue Cross Organization in the medical industry Get to Action Best Practices Toolkit Assess organizational readinessUnderstand whether Agile will solve the organization’s communication and process management problems. Storyboard: Implement Agile Practices That Work Preview Agile Readiness Assessment Tool Assess pilot appropriateness Determine which projects are most suited to an Agile approach. Rollout the pilot projectExperience processes and challenges with your pilot project by leveraging a Scrum baseline. Measure and communicate successAnalyze how sprint burndown velocity changed and review the pilot project. Prepare for a wider rolloutDetermine an approach for organizational-wide rollout and amend the Scrum process to fit individual teams. Download All Guided Implementation This guided implementation is a four call advisory process. Call #1: Assess the readiness of your organizationIdentify if your organization’s team, management, technology, and culture is prepared to transition to Agile. Info-Tech analysts will help you interpret your gaps and propose ways to fill these gaps. Call #2: Choose the right pilot projectIdentify a pilot project to gauge the implications of Agile on your team and organization based on complexity, duration, importance, and ownership. Info-Tech analysts will help you find the project that will garner the most benefits and lessons. Call #3: Rollout your Agile pilotPrepare and execute sprint sessions for your selected pilot project and track its progress with KPIs and metrics. Info-Tech analysts will discuss your experiences and techniques to help alleviate unexpected pain points. Call #4: Prepare for a wider rolloutTake the lessons learned to amend your Agile process to fit an organization-wide implementation. Info-Tech analysts will discuss approaches to improve your Agile strategy to include different teams and projects within your organization.

Transcript of Implement Agile Practices That Work

Implement Agile Practices That Work

Deliver on time and improve communication with the business to minimize project failure.View Infographic

Add to Library Forward 1

Last Revised: May 9, 2014

View Storyboard

Your ChallengeThe Agile evangelists are having trouble converting others to the Agile philosophy.Your team is facing pressure to deliver projects in a smaller time frame. The Waterfall approach is causing projects to go over budget, misunderstanding of project owners’ expectations, and late delivery to the end-customer.Projects that get implemented successfully may be susceptible to problems as the software gets older and crucial changes are too expensive.A consolidation roadmap that is based on an easy-to-implement method will ease the burden on resource and infrastructure maintenance.

Our AdviceCritical InsightAgile is not suitable for all organizations, or all projects. Carefully select pilot projects that have the greatest chance of success and determine the right requirements or risk significant cost overruns to fix problems or roll back development.An Agile rollout may require peripheral projects to be accelerated.Agile will modify internal roles and processes. Get ready for change management.Impact and ResultAgile will improve communication and transparency between teams and stakeholders, which will lead to higher quality products and fluid team dynamics.The success of the Agile pilot should be used to build the case for an organizational-wide deployment.In order for your organization to stay competitive, it must place focus on delivering projects at a quicker pace with the right features. ContributorsAmerinetPacific Blue CrossOrganization in the medical industryGet to Action

Best Practices ToolkitAssess organizational readinessUnderstand whether Agile will solve the organization’s communication and process management problems. Storyboard: Implement Agile Practices That Work Preview Agile Readiness Assessment ToolAssess pilot appropriateness Determine which projects are most suited to an Agile approach.

Rollout the pilot projectExperience processes and challenges with your pilot project by leveraging a Scrum baseline.

Measure and communicate successAnalyze how sprint burndown velocity changed and review the pilot project.

Prepare for a wider rolloutDetermine an approach for organizational-wide rollout and amend the Scrum process to fit individual teams.

Download AllGuided ImplementationThis guided implementation is a four call advisory process.Call #1: Assess the readiness of your organizationIdentify if your organization’s team, management, technology, and culture is prepared to transition to Agile. Info-Tech analysts will help you interpret your gaps and propose ways to fill these gaps. Call #2: Choose the right pilot projectIdentify a pilot project to gauge the implications of Agile on your team and organization based on complexity, duration, importance, and ownership. Info-Tech analysts will help you find the project that will garner the most benefits and lessons. Call #3: Rollout your Agile pilotPrepare and execute sprint sessions for your selected pilot project and track its progress with KPIs and metrics. Info-Tech analysts will discuss your experiences and techniques to help alleviate unexpected pain points.Call #4: Prepare for a wider rolloutTake the lessons learned to amend your Agile process to fit an organization-wide implementation. Info-Tech analysts will discuss approaches to improve your Agile strategy to include different teams and projects within your organization.