|
|
|
|
|
by melevittfl
977 days ago
|
|
> I am practically drowning in stressed-out managers trying to figure out how they can do Agile better. I think this highlights a big problem with Agile in many dysfunctional organisations. Management and execs think that “agile” means speed. That adopting agile will shorten the time needed to ship. The author’s contention that a backlog growing at a faster rate then work getting done also belays a misunderstanding of the purpose of agile. The author would be correct if everything on the backlog needed to be done. But that’s not the point. A backlog should consist of stories that express a unit of business value. So, that value can change and not everything on the backlog should be seen as having to get done. |
|
Most organizations I've seen simply put everything that they've decided needs to happen in the backlog, then do some sprints and call it a day. To be clear, this is not an Agile problem, it's a "our stakeholders have bad incentives and we can't engineer worth a damn" problem, but it is extremely tiresome to hear "not being Agile" being brought up so often instead of dealing with the real issues. To be clear, I am talking about the typical person in management, not your note.