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Study finds 268% higher failure rates for Agile software projects
(www.theregister.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
A more proper title would be “study finds 268% higher failure rates for poorly planned software projects”.
“Agile” as a word is mostly an excuse of poor planners for their poor planning skills.
Yeah, Agile isn't really at fault here. If done right - if you've got a scrum master, a proper product owner, proper planning and backlog grooming, etc. - it works really well. The problem is some companies think Agile is just "give the devs some pie-in-the-sky hopes and dreams, let 'em loose, and if they don't give half a dozen execs exactly what they want (despite their massively conflicting ideas on what they want), cancel the project."
In my experience it's just kanban, but make the devs feels guilty between sprints for not meeting their goals.
Absolutely It's so management can say "your velocity was down 15% this sprint" and not feel bad about it instead of saying "work more" It's plausible deniability for demanding unpaid overtime