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Thursday, November 12, 2015 - 10:00am - 11:00am
Agile Techniques
AT2

Managing Risk in Agile Development: It Isn’t Magic Prior Year Content

Has the adoption of agile techniques magically erased risk from software projects? When we change the project and product environment by adopting agile, have we tricked ourselves into thinking that risk has been abolished—when it hasn’t? Agile risk management is a continuous process that makes risk management part of how the team works so they get value from the activity. Thomas Cagley suggests that we develop user stories that specifically address risk so it is prioritized, planned, and executed as part of the normal agile cadence. Agile techniques—daily standups, demonstrations, retrospectives, and sprint-planning activities—provide a platform for monitoring and controlling risks. The built-in feedback loops act as a safety net to ensure eyes are continuously looking at what is happening and what could be happening. By constantly evaluating risk, agile processes avoid spending significant time analyzing risks that are not on the horizon, while making it very difficult for an unseen risk to sneak up on your project.

1.00 PMI® PDU
Thomas Cagley Jr

With more than twenty years of experience in the software industry, Tom Cagley is DCG’s agile process manager. Previously, Tom has held technical and managerial positions in different industries as a leader in software methods and metrics, quality assurance, and systems analysis. His areas of expertise encompass management experience in a wide variety of methods and metrics—lean software development, agile software development, and quality and quality assurance to achieve process improvements. Tom is a certified ScrumMaster, certified Scaled Agile Framework Program Consultant, TMMi Accredited Assessor, IT-CMF Tier 2 Associate, and holds an IT-CMF Professional Certificate.

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