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Peter Stevens has a great summary of different agile contract models on his blog. I've decided that I like one of them the best (Time and Materials with Variable Scope and Cost Ceiling) for a project I'm initiating, but I can't find a sample contract or template for such a contract. Anyone know where I could find something like that?

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See also alistair.cockburn.us/Agile+contracts – TrueWill Sep 17 at 3:13

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[rewritten in response to comment on original post]

It's not so difficult to write, examples can be found in your native tongue all over the Internet (plain time-material contract to start from). Just make sure you keep it clear and simple.

The 2 things to remember are:

  1. Write in your native language, to prevent confusion (if client is abroad English is best). E.g. our contracts are stated in Dutch.
  2. Have your attorney check whatever you come up with, for a decent template
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Your answer does not provide any value. Please write the template if it's not that difficult or ask one of your customers for us and I will be happy to give you an up-vote. – agsamek Oct 2 at 10:32
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Not a template, but some additional tips that might help with this - from Mike Cohn:

http://www.mountaingoatsoftware.com/articles/5-writing-contracts-for-agile-development

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I don't think this answered what he was asking also... more like how to write a better user stories... – Jimmy Chandra Oct 28 at 1:06
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Tom Gilb mentioned that he has a contract he put together for an extreme programming-style contract. The main points were 1) work is billed iteration by iteration 2) only work completed i.e. deployed, demonstrated and working in each iteration is billable.

He didn't hand out the contract but said you could get a copy if you want by emailing him. His website is at http://www.gilb.com/ (I've had a look at the Tom Gilb stuff but there's no sign of a template - sorry!)

Just for reference he said it's something he did for the Law Society (in the UK) and he mentioned it at one of the XPDay conferences in London.

Obviously if your work doesn't fall within the jurisdiction of the laws of England and Wales the likelihood is that you'll need to do some work to create an equivalent agreement that works with your local laws.

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Jeff Sutherland (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff%5FSutherland) spoke at Agile 2008 on this topic: http://jeffsutherland.com/scrum/2008/08/agile-2008-money-for-nothing.html (slides: http://jeffsutherland.com/scrum/Agile2008MoneyforNothing.pdf)

It spawned an "Agile Contracts" discussion over here: http://www.coactivate.org/projects/agile-contracts/summary, and that discussion includes a wiki page that's the beginnings of a contract template: http://www.coactivate.org/projects/agile-contracts/money-for-nothing-change-for-free

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