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Using the Agile Manifesto to Deliver Change – Part 1

Using the Agile Manifesto to Deliver Value

In February 2001, seventeen IT professionals got together to draft the Agile Manifesto. The set of four values and twelve principles expressed in the manifesto are the drivers of all Agile practices. Sometimes we forget this when we are in the middle of a difficult project, and sometimes we misinterpret or gloss over a principle. As part of the continuous improvement cycle, principle 12 should be invoked:-

“At regular intervals, the team reflects on how to become more effective, then tunes and adjusts its behaviour accordingly”.

The ideal forum for this is a retrospective. In addition to the normal questions asked during the retrospective, it would be beneficial to revisit the Manifesto and discuss whether the project is aligned with its ideals, value by value and principle by principle. Where there is a deviation, it is likely that there will be a weakness in the project. For instance, if “customer collaboration” (value 3) was neglected, there could be a problem with user acceptance of a feature. Below is a brief review of the Manifesto Values and Principles and how they contribute to adding value to a project.

59 Seconds Training Video

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Master of Agile – Agile Scrum Developer With 59 Seconds Agile (Video Training Course)

Introductory Offer: Free Course

Master of Agile – Agile Scrum Developer With 59 Seconds Agile (Video Training Course)

What is this course?

This ‘Master of Agile – Agile Scrum Developer With 59 Seconds Agile (Video Training Course)’ provides an in-depth understanding of the Agile Scrum Developer roles and responsibilities

You will explore the Agile Scrum project life-cycle, including how an Agile User Story is created, to how we know when it is ‘done’

This course is aimed at those with or without prior knowledge and experience of the Agile values and principles

During this course you will learn the tools needed to succeed as an Agile Scrum Developer

What will you learn?

You will gain an in-depth understanding of the Agile Scrum Developer roles and responsibilities, and you will be able to

  • Fully understand the role of the Agile Scrum Developer
  • Understand the roles involved in an Agile project
  • Create an effective Product Backlog
  • Effectively participate in Scrum Meetings such as the Daily Stand-up, Sprint Review and Retrospective
  • Identify the roles involves in the Scrum Team

What topics are covered within this course

You will cover the following topics during this course:

  1. An Introduction to Agile Project Management (Developer)
  2. The 12 Agile Principles (Developer)
  3. Introduction to Scrum (Developer)
  4. Scrum Project Roles (Developer)
  5. The Agile Project Life-cycle (Developer)
  6. Acceptance Criteria and the Prioritised Product Backlog (Developer)
  7. Initiating an Agile Project (Developer)
  8. Forming the Scrum Team (Developer)
  9. Epics and Personas (Developer)
  10. User Stories and Tasks (Developer)
  11. Implementation of Scrum (Developer)
  12. The Daily Scrum (Developer)
  13. The Product Backlog (Developer)
  14. Scrum Charts (Developer)
  15. Review and Retrospective (Developer)
  16. Validating a Sprint (Developer)
  17. Retrospective Sprint (Developer)
  18. Releasing the Product (Developer)
  19. The Communication Plan (Developer)
  20. Formal Business Sign-off (Developer)

Our Book Recommendations

We found these books great for finding out more information on Agile Scrum:

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