Managing Change in an Agile Environment

 

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Some people might think agile project methodologies aren’t disciplined because things change a lot. Au contraire! Agile totally supports change control and management.

  • Agile methodologies are designed for change. The scope for an agile project isn’t fixed at the start. And, the project team expects changes with each iteration. Stakeholders add, drop, and change the priority of backlog items. Changes are made with the participation of technical and business stakeholders. Bottom line, instead of trying to eliminate change, agile approaches are designed to manage it effectively.
  • Reviews are key to agile. Agile approaches encourage continuous feedback from stakeholders, which identifies and addresses changes. Features are tested as they are developed. Desk reviews and consultation are at the heart of agile processes. And stakeholders get to continually review alternatives for feature builds. This encourages useful changes, so they aren’t major obstacles down the line.
  • Stakeholders recommend and collaboratively approve changes. It’s always important to make sure unapproved changes don’t find their way into projects. In agile methodologies, frequent collaborative sessions like scrum meetings ensure stakeholders concur with changes — so changes are made transparently and effectively.
  • Change is validated with agile, because it’s based on empirical learning. The basis of agile is that stakeholders will learn from early deliverables, which then generates pragmatic improvements to future deliverables. Features can be added, adjusted, or modified as the project unfolds. These changes come about from actual experience. Changes are recommended by the stakeholders who will use project deliverables.. As a result, it’s rare that any change requests are misinterpreted or create stakeholder adoption issues.

In essence, agile handles changes easily and supports sound change control and management. Stakeholders are involved through feedback and consultation. Changes aren’t made without approval. And those changes almost always help the business.

 

Are there other ways that agile supports change that I’ve missed? Do you have questions about change control and management in agile methodologies. Join the conversation in the comments section!

 

For more about change with agile, check out Christina Charenkova’s Managing Change in an Agile Environment course.

Coming Up

On March 20, 2023, at 12PM MT, I’m joining Angela Wick to talk about how project managers and business analysts work together. It’s going to be fun and informative. Bring your questions! To sign up, click this link.

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