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Agile Project Management: Creating Innovative Products
 
 

Agile Project Management: Creating Innovative Products [Paperback]

Jim Highsmith
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Best practices for managing projects in agile environments—now updated with new techniques for larger projects


Today, the pace of project management moves faster. Project management needs to become more flexible and far more responsive to customers. Using Agile Project Management (APM), project managers can achieve all these goals without compromising value, quality, or business discipline. In Agile Project Management, Second Edition, renowned agile pioneer Jim Highsmith thoroughly updates his classic guide to APM, extending and refining it to support even the largest projects and organizations.

 

Writing for project leaders, managers, and executives at all levels, Highsmith integrates the best project management, product management, and software development practices into an overall framework designed to support unprecedented speed and mobility. The many topics added in this new edition include incorporating agile values, scaling agile projects, release planning, portfolio governance, and enhancing organizational agility. Project and business leaders will especially appreciate Highsmith’s new coverage of promoting agility through performance measurements based on value, quality, and constraints.

 

This edition’s coverage includes:

  • Understanding the agile revolution’s impact on product development
  • Recognizing when agile methods will work in project management, and when they won’t
  • Setting realistic business objectives for Agile Project Management
  •  Promoting agile values and principles across the organization
  • Utilizing a proven Agile Enterprise Framework that encompasses governance, project and iteration management, and technical practices
  • Optimizing all five stages of the agile project: Envision, Speculate, Explore, Adapt, and Close
  • Organizational and product-related processes for scaling agile to the largest projects and teams
  • Agile project governance solutions for executives and management
  •  The “Agile Triangle”: measuring performance in ways that encourage agility instead of discouraging it
  • The changing role of the agile project leader

 

 

 

 

From the Inside Flap

When the Manifesto for Agile Software Development

New technologies such as combinatorial chemistry and sophisticated computer simulation are fundamentally altering the innovation process itself. When these technologies are applied to the innovation process, the cost of iteration can be driven down dramatically, enabling exploratory and experimental processes to be both more effective and less costly than serial, specification-based processes. When it takes a pharmaceutical company months to develop a chemical compound and test it, errors are costly and careful laboratory design becomes the norm. When combinatorial chemistry can create hundreds, if not thousands, of compounds in a day and sophisticated instruments can test them in a few more days, careful specification and design can be less effective and more costly than careful experimentation. This same dynamic is at work in the automotive, integrated circuit, software, and pharmaceutical industries. It will soon be at work in your industry.

But taking advantage of these new innovation technologies has proved tricky. When exploration processes replace prescriptive processes, people have to change. For the chemist who now manages the experimental compounding process rather than designing compounds himself, and the manager who has to deal with hundreds of experiments rather than a detailed, prescriptive plan, new project management and organizational processes are required. Even when these technologies and processes are lower cost and higher performance than their predecessors, the transformation often proves difficult.

Experimentation matters, as the title of Harvard Business School professor Stefan Thomke's recent book exclaims (Thomke 2003), but many project managers are still mired in a prescriptive, conformance-to-plan mentality that eschews that very experimentation.

Project management, at least that sector of project management dealing with new product development, needs to be transformed, but to what? It needs to be transformed to move faster, be more flexible, and be aggressively customer responsive. Agile Project Management (APM) and agile product development answer this transformational need. APM brings together a set of principles and practices that enables project managers to catch up with the realities of modern product development.

The target audience for this book is project managers, those hearty individuals who shepherd teams through the exciting but often messy process of turning visions into products-be they cell phones or medical electronic instruments. APM rejects the view of project managers as functionaries who merely comply with the bureaucratic demands of schedules and budgets and replaces it with one in which they are intimately involved in helping teams deliver products. Agile project managers focus on products and people, not paperwork.

There are four broad topics covered in Agile Project Management: opportunity, principles, framework, and practices. The opportunity lies in creating innovative products and services-things that are new, different, and creative. These are products that can't be defined completely in the beginning but evolve over time through experimentation, exploration, and adaptation.

The principles of APM revolve around creating both adaptive products that are easy and less expensive to change and adaptive project teams that can respond rapidly to changes in their project's ecosystem. The framework is a set of high-level processes, or phases-Envision, Speculate, Explore, Adapt, and Close-that support exploration and experimentation and deliver results reliably, even in the face of constant change, uncertainty, and ambiguity. Finally, the practices-from developing a product vision box to getting the right people -provide actionable ways in which project teams can deliver results.

At its core, APM focuses on customers, products, and people-delivering value to customers, building adaptable products, and engaging talented people in collaborative work.

Jim Highsmith
January 2004
Flagstaff, Arizona



--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Product development teams are facing a quiet revolution in which both engineers and managers are struggling to adjust. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
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4.9 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Perhaps best for software and small hardware projects, April 26 2004
By 
W Boudville (Terra, Sol 3) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
APM claims to be a fresh approach to developing better products, be these hardware or software. Highsmith writes gracefully and most of the book sounds sensible. To me, the key point in APM is the continuous innovation. If the cost of experimenting falls sufficiently, then the people working on a project should seriously consider an overall strategy of attempting development phases that are, say, a week or so in length. And iterating. The idea is to explore as much as possible, with the cost in time being minimal.

This is in contrast to the conventional method of drawing up detailed specifications and a timeline, at the start of a project, in Pert or Gantt charts, and then forcing development to conform to those specifications and schedule.

[The continuous innovation and reduced delivery schedules are also explored at length in a companion book, "User Stories Applied" by Cohn, ISBN 0321-205685.]

Perhaps the best nugget I found in Highsmith's book is that "agility" involves an optimal amount of structure. He illustrated that by saying that in a highly changing development environment, a rigorous configuration management discipline is essential as the bedrock framework. In software, that is spot on. The quicker your group's code changes, the more the need for strict checkin. Invariably, rollbacks (oops!) are necessary.

APM may work best for software and small hardware projects. Where you can experiment cheaply, especially with simulations. For large hardware projects, this basic premise may not hold. The widespread use of Pert and Gantt charts, and the techniques behind these, exist not entirely, or even mostly, because of inertia. Expert judgment does usually go into these, and sometimes there is no other alternative.

His putdown of Business Process Reengineering is that its greatest flaw was in elevating process over people. Some of you will surely have wry grins over this.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Truly inspiring, Jun 22 2004
By 
Dadi Ingolfsson (Reykjavik, Reykjavik Iceland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Highsmith's third book, "Agile Project Management : Creating Innovative Products", is one of those rare books which give me that Elton John feeling of "you took the words right out of my mind". That stated, even though I felt this when reading the book (and with his former books) this is not to say that Highsmith doesn't provide a lot of new insights, it's just that the principles and practices outlined in the book are all in the spirit of those words floating around in my mind, so to speak. Words like 'adaptation', 'camaraderie', 'discipline', 'coaching', 'leadership', 'collaboration', 'communication', 'technical excellence', and more. What I find Highsmith do better than any other Agilist I've read so far, is convey the practical aspects of Agility with the human, social side of collaborative, competitive, exciting work. An inspiring quote on p. 256 says a lot:
"Delivering valuable products is important, and it's critical to project management success. No project team can exist for long without delivering value to its customers. But in the long run, how we deliver, how we interact at work, and how we treat each other as human beings are even more important."

This is a book all project managers should read. If you're not a project manager you should still read it; I'm a software developer and I was quite inspired by it. I won't go into the details of Highsmith's proposed APM framework, the principles and practices that make up that framework, but I implore you to get this book and read about them yourselves.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful book full of immediately practical advice, May 2 2004
By 
Michael Cohn "agile developer" (Lafayette, CO USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a wonderful and highly practical book. Within hours of putting it down I was already putting some of its advice into practice. A highly thought-provoking book, arguing, for instance, that agility is more attitude than process and more environment than methodology. Because of the complexity of today's software projects, one new product development project can rarely be viewed as a repeat of a prior project. This makes Highsmith's advice to favor a reliable process over a repeatable one particularly timely and important.

Interwoven into the book is a dialog between two project managers, one an agile development manager and the other a more traditional manager. Their conversations start each chapter and do an excellent job of introducing the main ideas of the chapter. Unlike many other agile books, the advice in this book can be applied to teams that are dipping their toes into agile waters or that are already fully immersed. Highsmith's writing, full of both wisdom and anecdotes, is both informative and fun. This book is a pleasure to read. More importantly, though, you will leave this book with some very specific practices you can immediately apply to your projects.

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