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Agile Software Development
Bob SchatzVP of Development
project success = business successTM
Introduction to Agility
Agility is a comprehensive response to the business challenges of profiting from rapidly changing, continually fragmenting, global markets for high-quality, high-performance, customer-configured goods and services
Agility is the ability to both create and respond to change in order to profit in a turbulent business environment
Agile projects are not controlled by conformance to plan but by conformance to business value
Agility is a way of life, a constantly emerging and changing response to business turbulence
project success = business successTM
Software Development Landscape
From the well-known Standish CHAOS Report 1994 Software projects fail:
Cancelled - 31%; Late or lacking of features – 53% Industry has only delivered on-time and on-budget 16% of the time! In 1995, this cost American companies well over $150 billion 94 of 100 projects will have restarts Average cost overrun is 189% 3 top reasons for failure
Lack of user (sponsor) involvement No executive management support Unclear, incomplete, & changing requirements
Typical software project experiences a 25% change in requirements 45% of features defined in early specs are never used
project success = business successTM
Bridge to Success
The Standish Group concluded that keys to success are:
Shorter time frames Delivery of software components early and often Iterative process “Growing" software vs. "developing" software Engage the user earlier Clear statement and set of objectives for
components Keep it simple! - Complexity = confusion and cost
project success = business successTM
What About Standardization?
Department of Defense Specifications International Standards Organization (ISO) Software Engineering Institute (SEI) Capability Maturity Model (CMM) – 5 Levels Project Management Institute (PMI) Body of Knowledge (PMBOK) Many derivatives as each company has created their own versions Standards have tried to capture the best practices of software development Organizations have tried to use these as prescriptive methods for success….and often failed
project success = business successTM
Three Flawed Assumptions
It is actually possible to plan a large project well enough that success is primarily determined by degree of conformance to plan
It is possible to protect against late changes to a large system project
It make sense to lock in big project decisions early
project success = business successTM
Typical Project LifecycleSlow start as everyone attempts to make sense of what problem is being solved
Struggle to interpret user’s requirements and translate into specification language
Development team begins to build system, but soon realizes that solution cannot be delivered in allocated time
Changes come in at rapid pace; Defects grow at a increasing rate
Final months become a battle against the bugs…overtime and weekends are the automatic response…life is miserable…but the end is near
Pep talks from management about how great the team is when faced with adversity. Asks you to step up once more and show how you meet challenges
System is delivered; Quality is questionable; User’s are not satisfied; years of maintenance and patches needed…we celebrate!
Project Post-Mortem
On to the next project, where the same steps will be repeated
project success = business successTM
20th Century Software Development
1960’s – Ad Hoc Code-and-Fix Programming 1970’s – Waterfall or sequential lifecycle model
Taught as the the ideal approach; a way to explain the creative process Adopted by the US Department of Defense Assumed low-change, low-novelty, and low-complexity work
1980’s – Plenty of bad music and haircuts Defense Spending during Regan Administration Commercial Software, Hardware, and Network companies forming
1990’s – US Department of Defense changes Based on failure rate, changed to iterative development preference Standish Report comes out in 1994 Dot-com companies producing high-speed, high-quality products to meet
market needs and survive…how?
project success = business successTM
Software Development and dot-comIn the dot-com era….
Investors and developers paid little attention to ROI thinking High demand for technical people Young, energetic workforce Get rich now…sacrifice everything Eat plenty of Pizza! Big Spending Pressure to get something to market quickly
After the bubble burst… End of the Y2K Fear September 11 Impact Downsizing, Rightsizing, & Global Competition Back to business basics
What did we learn?
project success = business successTM
Iterative Development An approach in which the overall lifecycle is composed of several
iterations, each a mini-project
Incremental Development Concept of growing a system through a series of Iterations
Agile Development Time-boxed Iterative, Incremental development that include values
and practices that encourage rapid and flexible response to change… flexibility/maneuverability to compete
In IT: Scrum, XP, RUP, DSDM, FDD, Crystal In Construction: Last Planner
Results 88% of organizations cited improved productivity 84% cited improved quality 83% cited increase in overall business satisfaction
An emerging wave…
project success = business successTM
Values of Agile Development
While there is value in the items on the right,
we value the items on the left more.
individuals and interactions
over processes and tools
working software over comprehensive documentation
customer collaboration over contract negotiation
responding to change over following a plan
project success = business successTM
Business of Software Development
Early software companies are technology-driven Business people have to respond to what developers give them Focus on innovation and novelty Development as a black box activity
Focus then shifts to market-driven Solutions to improve speed at which businesses can move Business people define product needs to Development IT departments became a cost to company bottom line Project Portfolio Management Feature Portfolio Management Incremental Funding Models Collaborative delivery of value Offshore development to save on costs Accountability and Visibility
project success = business successTM
Development at Primavera
Ironically…we build project management software!A leader in using agile development techniques
Work closely with thought leaders in the software development community Specialize in Scrum and XP Mentor customers who are starting on their own agile projects Successfully integrated project management and agile processes
Results: Ability to respond quickly to changing customer needs Discipline to manage successful software projects Consistently deliver products on time with the quality that our customers
expect An open work environment to maximize the communication among team
members A creative development team that enjoys their work, with good work/life
balance Project stakeholders and customers have visibility into progress and the
opportunity to give early feedback
project success = business successTM
Scrum Process
Key Practices Self-directed; self-organizing teams 15 minute daily stand up meeting with 3 special questions 30-calendar day iterations Each iteration begins with adaptive planning Stakeholder demo at end of each iteration Team measures progress daily Each iteration delivers tested, fully-functional software Never more than 30-days from potential production release
project success = business successTM
Benefits and Challenges of Scrum
Benefits Increased productivity through teamwork and focus Increased satisfaction through transparency and involvement Increased ROI through early delivery of high value functionality High quality throughout the development cycle using Test-First High energy, exciting process People know the importance of their work Opportunity to improve every 30 days
Challenges Leading the change Good news, you know where you are.
Bad news, you know where you are… Identifies all areas of improvement for engineering practices Change in culture Hard work
project success = business successTM
De-Cubiclization 2004
project success = business successTM
How can you be prepared?
Software development education and practice have become increasingly disconnected, both in language and values, from those who define and articulate the need for the software
Developers
Methodologies
Classes
Use Cases
Business Owners
Marketable Features
Cash Flow
Return on Investment
project success = business successTM
Software Education
Need to focus on Collaboration and Coordination
Students Software development is a creative and interactive “people process” Flexibility in programming, testing, and documentation skills Working with others on a cross-functional team Active listening and conflict resolution Business basics Communication
Faculty Projects that bring Computer Science and Business together Include project estimation and costing; decision-making exercises Enforce understanding of WHY project is important Focus on delivering iterative value Role-based, group assignments vs. Individual Teach agile techniques
project success = business successTM
Questions?
Recommended Reading
Agile Project Management with Scrum Schwaber
Agile Software Development with Scrum Schwaber
Agile Software Development Martin
Agile Project Management Chin
Agile Project Management Highsmith
Agile SW Development Ecosystems Highsmith
Agile and Iterative Development Larman
Software by Numbers Denne/Huang