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by throwawaymaths
1251 days ago
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There's a bias there, I think there are a lot of small shops where agile works great and you mostly hear about big shops that use it where it will never work great because you probably don't care that much about SmallTechCo. Versus communism where people (e.g. Benjamin Tucker) were predicting its primary failure mode decades before it ever was instantiated at any scale. |
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This hinders freedom to experiment with new techniques and methods within development teams, but it doesn't stop it. A "trick" is to provide all the artifacts that they want as if you followed their process to the letter, but still do things the way you want so long as it gets the job done. The problem with that is that you have no evidence you did things differently than the defined process and so they'll continue to believe the defined process is perfectly fine, if not excellent. Then some exec will decide to write a book about it and become a consultant selling the (broken) defined process (I assume this is how SAFe came to be, an ironically very rigid "agile" process).