Transitioning from distributed and traditional to distributed and agile: An experience report

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Abstract

Global companies that experienced extensive waterfall phased plans are trying to improve their existing processes to expedite team engagement. Agile methodologies have become an acceptable path to follow because it comprises project management as part of its practices. Agile practices have been used with the objective of simplifying project control through simple processes, easy to update documentation and higher team iteration over exhaustive documentation, focusing rather on team continuous improvement and aiming to add value to business processes. The purpose of this chapter is to describe the experience of a global multinational company on transitioning from distributed and traditional to distributed and agile. This company has development centers across North America, South America and Asia. This chapter covers challenges faced by the project teams of two pilot projects, including strengths of using agile practices in a globally distributed environment and practical recommendations for similar endeavors. © 2010 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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APA

Wildt, D., & Prikladnicki, R. (2010). Transitioning from distributed and traditional to distributed and agile: An experience report. In Agility Across Time and Space: Implementing Agile Methods in Global Software Projects (pp. 31–46). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-12442-6_3

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