Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Agile Scrum Project Management; Applicable to All Projects?








I just finished reading Agile Project Management with Scrum, by Ken Schwaber, and the case is most compelling.

As we've posted here, Scrum is all about daily communication and short 30-day iterations focused on business value. No doubt it's a change from traditional project management, but it takes a sensible, pragmatic approach. As the author points out, Scrum is about "the art of the possible" and especially shines when dealing with complex initiatives (which most IT projects are).

While the book is geared toward software development projects, I found myself asking if this approach would apply to other projects, such as implementing packaged software, or even non-IT projects. I think the answer is a definite "yes." However, the first round may take longer than 30 days, depending on the complexity of the configuration and a hundred other variables.

Suffice it to say that time-boxed iterations focused on delivering some level of pre-defined business value at each iteration is the right way to go for most projects, and certainly most IT projects. Phased deliverables offer earlier payback, quick wins, and allow the flexibility of changing course in future iterations. That sounds like a win-win to me!

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