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by eecc
2327 days ago
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I’m sorry if I sound harsh. The problem is not a matter of better or worse “alignment”. It’s just poor quality planning and execution. Your team is just improvising, figuring out as you go, what is exactly that you need to build. It’s not even Agile. Agile is about tight loop upfront planning, and avoiding last-minute distruttive changes and meetings... |
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That's an abomination definition of agile, probably influenced by scrum. In the agile manifesto it says nothing about "tight loop upfront planing", however it does explicitly say[1]:
> Individuals and interactions over processes and tools
> [...]
> Responding to change over following a plan
While that doesn't mean all planning is bad (it isn't and the manifesto acknowledges that), the planning is not the agile part, it's the leftover of the original traditional management, because it is necessary to a certain degree (e.g. for alignment but also for a lot of other business related tasks).
If you're running a pure kanban approach, you don't even plan in tight loops and I had much better experience with that (and a single team lead with a good strategic vision) than I had with Scrum. Scrum is just easier to handle for big (old) organizations and gives developers some protection from bad management.
[1] https://agilemanifesto.org/