There is a set of values and principles, which was articulated via the Agile Manifesto. Agile product development maximizes customer value while minimizing waste and shortening time to market.

A related set of values and principles originated with Lean, which includes five elements: the goal, kaizen (continuous improvement), product development flow, respect for people and Lean-Agile Leadership.

One of the biggest differences between Agile and Waterfall is that with Agile, there is a recognition that there are many unknowns whenever a new undertaking begins, and that it is not realistic to make a plan in advance which can possibly account for all of those unknowns. To speed the process of discovery, Agile focuses on incremental delivery over short time periods, which shortens the feedback loop to understand what has worked, what has not worked, along with ways to improve as the work proceeds. A common enabler for continuous improvement at the team level is a retrospective, such that team members gain valuable insights from each other, and from customers and stakeholders, on the most recent product delivery, realized via what Scrum calls the ” Increment”.

Related Media

Agile Video

Agile Podcasts

Agile Example

Related Subjects

Agile Manifesto

Agile Mindset

Agility

Lean

Retrospective

Acknowledgements

Authored by Philip Rogers

Adapted by Karl Smith

Photo by Photo by Ferran Feixas on Unsplash

 

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About the author

I'm a Lean-Agile Coach with a passion for Community Building and just celebrated our 5-year Meetup anniversary with over 2,000 members. With over 20+ years of experience in all different levels from the mailroom to the boardroom. My main focus the past few years has been helping organizations embrace Agility through Lean Portfolio Management, Program Management, launching Agile Release Trains (ARTs) and helping to create Lean Agile Centers of Excellence. Bringing people together is one of my passions and I host a large and successful Meetup which has celebrated our 5 year anniversary and love seeing all the smiles and happy faces. I was also the co-chair for A20dmv.org celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Agile Manifesto in the DC Metro area. Growing and coaching new leaders is important to me and when I heard Gapbuster.org needed hosting a new website, I pulled some friends together and we delivered. I'm blessed, not only by an amazing agile community but also by my loving family. My wife Nataliya is an avid gardener and speaks 3 languages fluently. I love my children (Tatiana and Max) more than anything in this world but realize nothing loves me more than my eldest dog Sigyn. Now I'm becoming a part-time soccer coach for Max so he's able to continue playing with his amazing friends.

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