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The 12 Agile Principles: Definitions & How to Use Them

ProjectManager.com

Agile principles are the foundations of agile. Agile is a project management methodology that allows development teams to set up a dynamic work management framework. This method is based on 12 guiding principles, known as agile principles. What Are the 12 Agile Principles? Agile Core Values.

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7 Ways to Sell Agile to Project Stakeholders

LiquidPlanner

Whether you’re making the move to Agile project management in your development group or creating an Agile process for your in-house project management methodology, chances are you’re going to have to sell this change to executives in your organization. Align Agile project management with your organization’s strategy.

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What Is a Burn Up Chart In Agile Project Management?

ProjectManager.com

But if you’re working in an agile environment, the Gantt chart isn’t the right tool for your iterative approach to project management. A burn up chart is a tool used in agile project management to measure progress. Scrum teams working in an agile environment use a burn up chart to help them measure progress.

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What Is Kanban? Meaning, Definitions & Best Practices

ProjectManager.com

Assign tasks to your team members, track their progress and monitor project costs in real time. Make process policies explicit and share them with your team, preferably during meetings when you can address their questions, comments or concerns. The kanban board is one way to keep track of a team’s workflow.

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5 Tips for Better Agile Release Planning

ProjectManager.com

Product features and stakeholder requirements constantly change, and your initial product development plan might look very different as the project evolves. Agile release planning, also known as scrum release planning, is an alternative to the traditional waterfall approach. How does that fit into an agile project?

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Development Team – why your Scrum doesn’t work (2/3)

Scrum.org

In a previous post “Don’t blame “agile” for existing problems” I shared my analysis why agile or Scrum itself often gets the blame. This time we take the perspective of the Development Team. Development Team – Why your Scrum Doesn’t work (2/3) (this post). Development Team.

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From Unused Gym Memberships to Agile Implementation The Parallels of Misapplied Investments

Scrum.org

In software development, an increasingly prevalent phenomenon is the adoption of agile methodologies, akin to individuals embarking on fitness journeys through gym memberships. The gym membership must be coupled with consistent visits, well-planned workout regimes, and monitored nutrition. Enter the corporate world.

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