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Policy&Practice

August 2016

32

Illustration via Shutterstock

technology

speaks

By Carole Hussey and Joe Baile

Living in an Agile World

Know Before You Go

T

his has been the year of agility.

We are going to build systems

faster, cheaper, and better using an

Agile methodology. There are some

great elements of an Agile approach,

however there are some things that

you should be aware of before making

the final decision.

What’s All the Hype?

First of all, Agile is not really new.

It began in the mid 1980s at DuPont.

Responding to frustrations with the

heavyweight and often bureaucratic

processes associated with waterfall

methodologies, 17 practitioners came

together to write the “Manifesto for

Agile Software Development” in 2001.

In the manifesto they agreed to four

core values:

„

„

Individuals and interactions

over

processes and tools

„

„

Working software

over comprehen-

sive documentation

„

„

Customer collaboration

over

contract negotiation

„

„

Responding to change

over fol-

lowing a plan

Two of the primary benefits of Agile

are the opportunity for more robust

stakeholder engagement and the flex-

ibility to change and adapt throughout

the lifecycle of the project. In a quest

to improve project outcomes, mitigate

risk, and avoid increased costs, the

market is shifting to Agile.

Preparing for Agile

Moving to an Agile methodology is

not just a technical decision. There are

significant business implications and

cultural changes for any organization.

If you decide to make this change, it is

critical to understand the challenges

and to have a plan for how to manage

them. Some potential mitigation

approaches include:

Planning.

The planning activities

will provide a more accurate reflection

of the investments needed, schedule,

and resource requirements for imple-

menting the solution into the business

environment. Key activities for the

planning phase include:

„

„

Establishing Executive

Sponsorship—Necessary for

funding, human capital needs, and

ultimate decision-making. If the

organization doesn’t see clearly the

value and importance of the work,

other priorities will interfere and

make the process unsuccessful.

„

„

Establishing a Governance

Structure—This should include the

right combination of business and

technology teams, managing the

“We are uncovering

betterways of

developing software

by doing it andhelping

others do it.”

See Agile World on page 43