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Things you can Check when Adopting Agile

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 An agile checklist can be helpful when adopting agile in an organization. From the blog post a corporate agile 10-point checklist by Elena Yatzeck:

(..) I actually have a checklist of 10 things to think about if you're a product owner at a big company thinking of trying out some agile today.  Some of these might even apply to you if you're in a smaller place.

Her checklist covers various things which can be considered when implementing agile. Some of the things on her checklist are:

Your staffing pattern.  A full agile project requires that you have the full team engaged for the whole duration of the project at the right ratios.  So as you provision the project, check to see whether you can arrange this staffing pattern.  If not, you will encounter risks because of missing people.

Auditing.  If this is working correctly, you should always know what is going on, because you are there for it in person during the release planning phase, and you can see the plan and execution to plan in the project dashboards for your work streams.

The last item on the checklist from Elena discusses what it takes to use agile, and how to deal with advices:

Beware of Zealots.  (…)  Any time you see the words “it’s just not agile if…” you should beware.  Agile offers a lot of opportunities, but to benefit, you need to start with common sense, experience of human nature, technical expertise, and a lot of pragmatism.  You should never accept advice unless the person giving it to you can tell you why it would benefit you to do so.

In the blog post do scrummasters need agile checklists?, Alan Dayley discusses the pro’s and con’s of agile checklists:

There’s a constant debate in agile circles about checklists. Should we create them and follow them strictly or shouldn’t we?  They’re recognized as helpful by some and called evil by others.

Alan goes into the benefits and dangers of agile checklists. He concludes that checklist can be valuable, and suggests to use them as agile thoughtlists:

I see checklists as a tool for thinking about your process. Sure, they’re a reminder to do things you may not yet have as habit, and yes, they can be helpful to new teams or individuals new to agile processes. However, we need to think about the value each check item brings to the customer and product.

If you use them, include thought, every time, with every step. And don’t be afraid to change them as needed! Heck, even drop them completely if they’re slowing you down.No matter where you lie on debate over using agile checklists, maybe the solution to the endless battle is to simply refer to them as agile thoughtlists. A reminder in and of itself to always think through whatever it is that you’re tasked with.

There are several other agile checklists available, similar to the corporate agile 10-point checklist by Elena Yatzeck, that can help you to assess your agile implementation. Some examples are:

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