Transitioning from Waterfall to Agile
According to the Standish Chaos report, 13% of Waterfall software development projects succeed. This compares with 42% of Agile projects. It’s no wonder so many people want to jump on
According to the Standish Chaos report, 13% of Waterfall software development projects succeed. This compares with 42% of Agile projects. It’s no wonder so many people want to jump on
So this happened. Recently, I was working with a system integration consultancy, not surprisingly, on a system integration project. The SI decided to adopt a Wagile approach, where Waterfall and
In my travels, I’ve noticed that too many companies don’t seem to understand certain fundamental methodologies and roles. I’ve written at length how enterprises fail to grasp what’s meant by
Spoiler Alert: Agile is a software product management framework. Many companies read about the benefits of Agile software development and want to employ it as a project management methodology. Somehow,