Happiness and Agility |
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| Wednesday, 06 July 2011 23:00 |
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Agile development practices at their core, have a common theme of making better use of the time spent developing software. This starts at the project level and continues down to the developer day-to-day-activities. Consider an agile iteration. The team starts the iteration with a clear sense of the priorities for the sprint, and pretty good understanding of the project scope. Having estimated and committed to getting the work done, the team also has a sense that the goal is attainable. The team members then collaborate to get the work done as a team.
While we can see how this might make for an efficient delivery process, consider how agile practices relate to enjoyment and morale on the team. In the paper If Money Doesn't Make You Happy, Consider Time, Jennifer Aaker, Melanie Rudd, and Cassie Mogilner discuss five principles for spending time in a happiness-maximizing way. Some of these seem like a bit of as stretch, but there is a lot to be said about the relationship between a workplace using agile practices agile, and the teams being effective and happy. Consider how the 5 principles could map to agile practices:
But agile is more than just a product planning process that increases predictability It can also increase productivity and (as Brian Marick said during an Agile 2008 Keynote) Joy. Author:
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