| Overview 
				
Today, global businesses want and need to be able to deliver products to the market faster. As new projects are selected, it is important to determine whether a traditional or Agile project management approach is appropriate. For a project to succeed, the organization needs to support the process, customers need to be involved daily, teams need to be creative and self-disciplined, and project managers need to be able to facilitate and lead the team. Working in an Agile environment means being able to quickly deliver the customers' features on time and be able to respond to their needs by balancing flexibility and stability in this ever-changing world.
 This Agile for beginners course will help you:
 
Through an integrated case study, participants will have the opportunity to select a project for Agile development and work through the life cycle of an Agile project.Decide if your organization is ready to accept estimates and status reports that are different from those of previous projects
Determine whether your customer will be an active participant on a daily basis
Identify any shortcomings your global team may have
Determine if the project manager has the skills and characteristics needed to lead an Agile project
 
 Course duration
 
 3 days
 
 Course outline
 
 Introduction to Agile Project Management
 
Traditional Approach Versus Agile ApproachHistory of agile movement
Agile manifesto
Principles behind the Agile manifesto
Common myths about Agile project management
Characteristics of an Agile project
When not to use Agile development
Strengths and challenges of Agile development
Variants of Agile methods
 
Developing the Agile EnvironmentTraditional project management
Agile project management
Traditional vs. Agile methods
Phases of an Agile project
Agile project skills
PMBOK® Guide knowledge areas
PMBOK® Guide process groups
 
Envisioning the Agile ProjectAgile culture
Management challenges to Agile adoption
Transition process for management
Team challenges to Agile adoption
Distributed team challenges
Stakeholder/customer challenges to Agile adoption
Agile approach to hybrid environments
The Agile project manager
Characteristics of an Agile project manager
Skills required to lead an Agile project
 
Building an IterationAgile approach to the requirement process
The envisioning process
User story development
Release planning
Prioritizing feature for a release
Iterations in releases
 
Estimating for an IterationIteration planning
Allocating work
How far in advance do you plan?
 
Managing RisksRough order of magnitude
Velocity
Story points
Time box
Delivery schedule
Planning poker
 
Managing Iteration ChangesTracking iteration progress
Daily standup meeting
Iteration delta tables
Burndown charts
Reading a Burndown chart
Release Burndown chart
Iteration Burndown chart
Progress reports
Running test procedures
Agile EVM
 
Introducing change to an iterative process
Integrating change into the product
Balancing change
Closing out an Agile project
Early termination of an Agile project
Project closeout retrospective
 
 
 
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