James Shore sums it up pretty well in this article . There is another thread in SO on the lines of this post.
My two cents:
- I like the notion of Shu-Ha-Ri (Alistair C.'s Agile book). However people jumping onto the bandwagon jump directly to Ha / Ri without the preliminary phase of learning and doing everything to the T.
- People are having all dessert and no vegetables as James Shore says. Things that are easy to do get adopted.. Scrums, TDD, Continuous Integration, etc. Supporting or balancing practices like RealCustomer, AcceptanceTesting, IterationPlanning, Refactoring, etc. are left out or done in an ad-hoc manner. This is setting yourself up for failure. Don't pick-n-choose unless you know what you are missing out on. Complete the Shu phase.. before experimenting. No free lunch.
- Trying to cover up people issues with agile practices and tools isn't gonna cut it. They will continue to surface. Org. Cultures where technology is treated as 'Gimme an end date & start coding, I'll give requirements later' slave labor, will not benefit from the agile spectrum. Agile feeds on competence, discipline, respect, feedback, professionalism, trust,.. cultures that don't have this are going to find it tough. Also agile brings issues out in the open in a very 'in-your-face' way..
- Agile is no substitute for frequent 'Inspect and Adapt', not even close. The good thing is agile 'fails fast'.. so you can change course if you keep your eyes open.
What would the phrase "agile failed" mean, exactly? That a project using an agile methodology failed? What does it mean for a project to fail? Why wouldn't we say "the project failed", or "Joe failed", or "the market failed (to materialize)"? Agile isn't an actor. It can't succeed, nor can it fail.
If people want to be seen as responsible when things go well, it seems to me that they ought to accept that they are also responsible when things don't go well.
But as far as I can recall, no one has ever said that Agile -- whatever that is -- always works.
Update: Ron Jeffries just nailed what I was trying to say with the following post.
If you don’t do what we suggest, then don’t call what you do by the name of what we suggest. Don’t call it XP if you don’t do the XP practices. Don’t call it Scrum if you don’t Inspect and Adapt... The only way to succeed is to build a team who work well together and who get things done. XP and Scrum are the best ways we know to work well together. You have to do right things, and you have to do things right, in order to succeed.
