Tailoring agility: Promiscuous pair story authoring and value calculation

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Abstract

This chapter describes how a multi-national software organization created a business plan involving business units from eight countries that followed an agile way, after two previously failed attempts with traditional approaches. The case is told by the consultant who initiated implementation of agility into requirements gathering, estimation and planning processes in an international setting. The agile approach was inspired by XP, but then tailored to meet the peculiar requirements. Two innovations were critical. The first innovation was promiscuous pair story authoring, where user stories were written by two people (similarly to pair programming), and the pairing changed very often (as frequently as every 15-20 minutes) to achieve promiscuity and cater for diverse point of views. The second innovation was an economic value evaluation (and not the cost) which was attributed to stories. Continuous recalculation of the financial value of the stories allowed to assess the projects financial return. In this case implementation of agility in the international context allowed the involved team members to reach consensus and unanimity of decisions, vision and purpose. © 2010 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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APA

Tendon, S. (2010). Tailoring agility: Promiscuous pair story authoring and value calculation. In Agility Across Time and Space: Implementing Agile Methods in Global Software Projects (pp. 47–70). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-12442-6_4

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