Agility Across Time and Space: Implementing Agile Methods in Global Software Projects Review
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(More customer reviews)We cannot just rely on acts of faith by eloquent process gurus to help us define the adequate process, or set of practices outside of the agile sweet spot. Cold-headed, impartial investigation is required. Such research is generally not very easy to conduct; it is often qualitative, rather than quantitative, it draws more from social sciences than computer science, not easy to publish, not easy to carve down to masters' thesis bite size.
This is the reason why I welcome this volume on agility across time and space. Looking at how agile practices performed once stretched outside of the agile "sweet spot", for large projects and distributed projects, that is, the non-trivial ones. The researchers and practitioners who collectively wrote this volume have been examining without prejudice what works and what does not, and trying to get at the root cause, giving us another and better perspective on this fascinating wave: the agile software development movement. They confront some of the key factors in software development, which gives our field such a wide spectrum of possible approaches: size, team distribution, role of architecture, and culture. (Disclosure: I wrote the foreword for this book.)
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Rather than deciding whether or not to get involved in global sourcing, many companies are facing decisions about whether or not to apply agile methods in their distributed projects. These companies are often motivated by the opportunities to solve the coordination and communication difficulties associated with global software development. Yet while agile principles prescribe close interaction and co-location, the very nature of distributed software development does not support these prerequisites. Šmite, Moe, and Ågerfalk structured the book into five parts. In 'Motivation" the editors introduce the fundamentals of agile distributed software development and explain the rationale behind the application of agile practices in globally distributed software projects. ' Transition" describes implementation strategies, adoption of particular agile practices for distributed projects, and general concepts of agility. 'Management" details practical implications for project planning, time management, and customer and subcontractor interaction. 'Teams" discusses agile distributed team configuration, effective communication and knowledge transfer, and allocation of roles and responsibilities. Finally, in the 'Epilogue" the editors summarize all contributions and present future trends for research and practice in agile distributed development.This book is primarily targeted at researchers, lecturers, and students in empirical software engineering, and at practitioners involved in globally distributed software projects. The contributions are based on sound empirical research and identify gaps and commonalities in both the existing state of the art and state of the practice. In addition, they also offer practical advice through many hints, checklists, and experience reports.Questions answered in this book include:What should companies expect from merging agile and distributed strategies?What are the stumbling blocks that prevent companies from realizing the benefits of the agile approach in distributed environments, and how can we recognize infeasible strategies and unfavorable circumstances?What helps managers cope with the challenges of implementing agile approaches in distributed software development projects?How can distributed teams survive the decisions taken by management and become efficient through the application of agile approaches?
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