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  2. Dynamic systems development method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_systems...

    The DSDM Agile Project Framework is an iterative and incremental approach that embraces principles of Agile development, including continuous user/customer involvement. DSDM fixes cost, quality and time at the outset and uses the MoSCoW prioritisation of scope into musts , shoulds , coulds and will not haves to adjust the project deliverable to ...

  3. Agile unified process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agile_Unified_Process

    Agile unified process (AUP) is a simplified version of the rational unified process (RUP) developed by Scott Ambler. [1] It describes a simple, easy to understand approach to developing business application software using agile techniques and concepts yet still remaining true to the RUP.

  4. Agile management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agile_management

    Agile management is the application of the principles of Agile software development and Lean Management to various team and project management processes, particularly product development. Following the appearance of The Manifesto for Agile Software Development in 2001, organizations discovered the need for agile technique to spread into other ...

  5. Agile software development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agile_software_development

    Some of the wider principles of agile software development have also found application in general management [134] (e.g., strategy, governance, risk, finance) under the terms business agility or agile business management. Agile software methodologies have also been adopted for use with the learning engineering process, an iterative data ...

  6. Scrum (software development) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrum_(software_development)

    Scrum Agile events, based on The 2020 Scrum Guide [1] Scrum is an agile team collaboration framework commonly used in software development and other industries. Scrum prescribes for teams to break work into goals to be completed within time-boxed iterations, called sprints. Each sprint is no longer than one month and commonly lasts two weeks.

  7. Unified process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_Process

    The rational unified process defines nine disciplines: business modeling, requirements, analysis and design, Implementation, test, deployment, configuration and change management, project management, and environment. The enterprise unified process extends RUP through the addition of eight "enterprise" disciplines.

  8. Feature-driven development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feature-driven_development

    FDD is a model-driven short-iteration process that consists of five basic activities. For accurate state reporting and keeping track of the software development project, milestones that mark the progress made on each feature are defined.

  9. Scaled agile framework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scaled_agile_framework

    The scaled agile framework (SAFe) is a set of organization and workflow patterns intended to guide enterprises in scaling lean and agile practices. [1] [2] Along with disciplined agile delivery (DAD) and S@S (Scrum@Scale), SAFe is one of a growing number of frameworks that seek to address the problems encountered when scaling beyond a single team.