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by jmccree
4018 days ago
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It seems like you are invoking the No true Scotsman fallacy. There's a lot of companies that do "Agile" and "Scrum" that are exactly like he describes. When Feature X has to be done this sprint because it's already been sold to (Board|Client|Investors|Other Dept), there's not much time to think about "How?", it's more like "If I'm going to be working Sat and Sun again?". I'm sure there are organizations out there where Agile/Scrum is working fantastic for them in practice, and developers are happy with their work and career prospects. I just have yet to encounter one in the wild personally. |
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I totally agree that there are a lot of companies that claim to be doing Agile or Scrum, and often it just means they picked one element, pulled it out of its context, and applied it in a situation that has nothing to do with Agile or Scrum.
Years ago I worked for a company that claimed to be doing Scrum because they started each day with a stand-up meeting. The meeting was fine, but what they did really wasn't Scrum by any stretch of the imagination. No sprints, no backlog, no retrospective, no well-defined stories, and no clue what our pace of development was. And even if you do have all the trappings of Scrum, it's still not Scrum if you ignore the underlying principles.