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In-Depth: The Evidence-Based Business Case For Agile

Scrum.org

And we share results from our own analyses based on actual data from stakeholders and Scrum teams that we collected through the Scrum Team Survey. We collected the data through our Scrum Team Survey. Fortunately, the Scrum Team Survey allows teams to ask their stakeholders to evaluate their outcomes. Cardozo et.

Agile 201
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The unbreakable bond: How outstanding service = brand loyalty

Rebel’s Guide to PM

Offer the human touch for exceptional service beyond automation As technology advances, there is a greater emphasis on automation and AI-powered solutions. Provide scripts and training, but empower team members to do what’s right – even if that means going off piste. This article first appeared at Rebel's Guide to Project Management

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21st Century Leadership - Prologue

Scrum.org

See this survey for exit criteria from step 1. See this survey for exit criteria from step 2. See this survey for exit criteria from step 3. See this survey for exit criteria from step 4. See this survey for exit criteria from step 5, as there is always room for improvement. You don't see what you don't see".

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Success in Disruptive Times: PMI’s 2018 Pulse of the Profession

Online PM Courses

The PMI’s Annual Project Management Survey: The Pulse of the Profession. Our regular readers will know that, for the last two years, we have extracted the marrow from the bones of the PMI’s Pulse of the Profession survey. You can find our previous reviews at: Good News from the PMI Pulse of the Profession 2017 Report.

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Top Solutions to Project Failure – Epicflow Research Part 2

Epicflow Blog

We’ve surveyed members of LinkedIn PM communities to find out what leads to project failure. Over 200 PM experts from ExxonMobil, INEOS, DXC Technology, and other companies have shared their experience and proved that it’s a super hot topic. We’ve also received lots of great ideas on how to overcome the causes of project failure.

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PMI Are some more equal than others?

The Lazy Project Manager

To bring about some further objectivity (I am trying here but it isn’t easy since I realise might be part of the problem) I conducted a simple survey [1] through LinkedIn and Twitter and this is what I found. Depends on how well conference organisers have analysed audience needs and identified tracks with specialised PM information.

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On Technical Debt And Code Smells: Surprising insights from scientific studies

Scrum.org

So I was pleasantly surprised when Carsten Grønbejrg Lützen pointed at a peer-reviewed academic paper by Michele Tufano and his colleagues (2015), called “When and Why Your Code Starts To Smell Bad”. This post is ideal for developers with some experience, and for people who support developers in the development of their technical skills.