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Our team has been asked to represent our development efforts in a project plan. No one is unhappy with our work or questioning our ability to deliver, we are just participating in an IT cattle call for project plans. Trouble is we are an agile team and haven't thought about our work in terms of a formal project plan.

While we have a general idea of what we are working on next we aren't 100% sure until we plan an iteration. Until now our team has largely operated in a vacuum and has not been required to present our methodology or metrics to outside parties. We follow most of the practices espoused in Extreme Programming.

We hold quarterly planning meetings to have a general idea of the stories we are going to work on for a quarter. That said, our stories are documented on 3x5 cards and are only estimated at the beginning of the iteration in which they are going to be worked. After estimation we document the story in Team Foundation Sever. During an iteration, we attach code to stories and mark stories as completed once finished. From this data we are able to generate burn down and velocity charts. Most importantly we know our average velocity for an iteration keeping us from biting off more than we can chew.

I am not looking to modify the way we do development but want to present our development activities in a report that someone only familiar with waterfall will understand. In What Does an Agile Project Plan Look Like, Kent McDonald does a good job laying out the differences between agile and waterfall project plans. He specifies the differences in consumable bullets:

  • An agile project plan is feature based
  • An Agile Project Plan is organized into iterations
  • An Agile Project Plan has different levels of detail depending on the time frame
  • An Agile Project Plan is owned by the Team

Being able to explain the differences is great, but how best to present the data?

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2 Answers

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Show them the half-arsed agile manifesto.

It definitely tells you what the Agile system is all about by comparing it to waterfall methods.

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The first question to ask is what does the business actually want? Some business are perfectly happy seeing agile sprints represented / broken down into a GNATT chart. It may make no sense to anyone that actually understands the sprints and may change regularly but it is familiar to the people asking for it. Then along with the GNATT chart, present the burndown, etc.

We've been through something similar and eventually (if Agile is working) it will sell itself (if it doesn't then why are you doing it?). People begin to understand "effort" and that a certain team is able to "burn down" 40 effort points in a 2 week sprint and are actually pretty good on average of estimating those effort points. Once they see the benefits for them, they'll sell the process to the rest of the business for you. But the main point is that you can never, ever force it onto somebody as they'll just fight back.

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I totally agree that agile cannot be forced upon anyone. Either you want to or you don't. That said it just seems odd to present a GNATT chart for a two week iteration, but I am all about bringing other people into the fold. – ahsteele Apr 14 '11 at 3:39
Good luck with your efforts, hopefully you can get people on board. – Paul Hadfield Apr 15 '11 at 10:10

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