article thumbnail

Top 20 Project Management Methodologies & their Scions: Which One You Should Choose & Why?

Taskque

Here are the 20 most popular project management methodologies and their scions: Agile. Critical Chain Project Management. Rapid Application Development. Agile project management methodology follows an iterative model to bring continuous improvements and ensure consistent product delivery. Construction Phase.

article thumbnail

Top 20 Project Management Methodologies & their Scions: Which One You Should Choose & Why?

Taskque

Here are the 20 most popular project management methodologies and their scions: Agile. Critical Chain Project Management. Rapid Application Development. Moreover, it also offers flexibility to change and creates a working product earlier than other methodologies. Rapid Application Development.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Scrum vs Kanban vs Agile vs Waterfall – A side-by-side comparison

nTask

Kanban is yet another one of Agile frameworks that is designed to make project lifecycle more streamlined and team collaboration more effective albeit through consistent improvements and ease in change management. Rapid application development (RAD). Waterfall method itself.

SCRUM 113
article thumbnail

Webinar Recap: Agile Series Part 1 – Understanding & Incorporating Agile Project Management

MPUG

And so this is where agile kind of fits in and isn’t just necessarily only for software development. In fact, back in the 1990s and even the 80s when I was working construction we did agile practices all the time, we just didn’t call it agile. And again, I mentioned some of my background is I used to be in construction.

Agile 40
article thumbnail

The Complete Glossary of 614 Project Management Terms

Workamajig

Integration Management Plan: This plan documents the project's approach to integration planning and change management. Integration Planning also includes managing and integrating any changes in the project's scope, schedule, or budget. This approach is primarily used in software development.