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selling points of Agile practices

I've found that non-technical managers and executives typically like to see statistics and figures when it comes to performance and project management.

I'm currently trying to build a list of notable statistics and facts about Agile Development in order to evangelize the methodologies I find effective. The best resource I've found thus far is:

http://www.ambysoft.com/surveys/success2008.html but I'm a bit concerned about bias.

Another interesting, but more general article - http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/rational/library/feb06/marasco/

Were you ever in a position where you had to "sell" the idea of Agile? What did you use to accomplish this?

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Are people still selling that? – BobbyShaftoe Sep 4 at 17:47
I think so - there's a lot of organizations that aren't using Agile or aren't using it effectively. What methodologies are you using @BobbyShaftoe? I'm not a purist in the sense you have to pick XP or SCRUM and comply with it rigidly. I do want to illustrate its overall effectiveness, though. – danpickett Sep 4 at 17:52

closed as exact duplicate by Ilya Kochetov, JB King, fbrereto, philippe , tvanfosson Sep 4 at 20:11

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At our company, they got the Agile germ, too. We've actually got a not-too-technical manager who wants to sell it to us!

Although there's indeed a lot of statistics out there, the most important thing to do is look what about this methodology will make your development better. If you do it because you like post-it's, you're wrong. If you want to improve your response time to customer needs, you may be right. Upon investigation, we found that we already did a lot of agile things, and that some of the other Agile methods don't apply to us.

The best statistic is the one that applies on your particular situation. No one can create this but you.

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are covering the 'sales points' topic in details

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+1 I'd love some good statistics.

Personally, we just started doing it as a very small team. A few years later management is behind it and trying to use us as an example for the rest of the company.

That probably wouldn't work if we started out with a very formal process or more meddlesome management.

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