show/hide this revision's text 4 added link to scrum Smells

Personally.. I think Scrum is easier to accept for the old-scientific-style of management than any of the agile methods out there. Scrums that should take 30 mins or less morph into long-running status updates of yore... (now daily and standing!)

As with most things agile.. I think the fault lies in

  • not understanding the principles behind the methodology... leading to following listed practices on blind faith.. and helplessness when they don't work
  • not adapting the methodology to the problem at hand. Standardizing is just so tempting.. chasing Templatized solutions for all problems. 'this is our new process. Everyone shall comply.'
  • not adjusting to ground realities and retrospectives.
  • Fixing symptoms rather than the disease.

Good people will make good software (even without agile, SCRUM, or whatever)... mediocre and lower people will churn out similar software even with their home-grown variety of agile. However people doing agile as it was meant to.. will result in better products

Update: JFYI..Just found a catalog of 'Scrum smells' on Mike Cohn's site. Short , nicely written and from the man himself.

show/hide this revision's text 3 replaced 'strokes'

Personally.. I think Scrum strokes is easier to accept for the old-scientific-style of management better than any of the agile methods out there. Scrums that should take 30 mins or less morph into long-running status updates of yore... (now daily and standing!)

As with most things agile.. I think the fault lies in

  • not understanding the principles behind the methodology... leading to following listed practices on blind faith.. and helplessness when they don't work
  • not adapting the methodology to the problem at hand. Standardizing is just so tempting.. chasing Templatized solutions for all problems. 'this is our new process. Everyone shall comply.'
  • not adjusting to ground realities and retrospectives.
  • Fixing symptoms rather than the disease.

Good people will make good software (even without agile, SCRUM, or whatever)... mediocre and lower people will churn out similar software even with their home-grown variety of agile. However people doing agile as it was meant to.. will result in better products

show/hide this revision's text 2 added 79 characters in body

Personally.. I think Scrum strokes the old-scientific-style of management better than any of the agile methods out there. Scrums that should take 30 mins or less morph into long-running status updates of yore... (now daily and standing!)

As with most things agile.. I think the fault lies in

  • not understanding the principles behind the methodology... leading to following listed practices on blind faith.. and helplessness when they don't work
  • not adapting the methodology to the problem at hand. Standardizing is just so tempting.. chasing Templatized solutions for all problems. 'this is our new process. Everyone shall comply.'
  • not adjusting to ground realities and retrospectives.
  • Fixing symptoms rather than the disease.

Good people will make good software (even without agile, SCRUM, or whatever)... mediocre and lower people will churn out similar software even with their home-grown variety of agile. However people doing agile as it was meant to.. will result in better products

show/hide this revision's text 1