Agile versus Waterfall - Programming
525W2 Assignment 1 - Agile versus Waterfall Assignment 1: Agile versus Waterfall Worth 110 points The following resources may be helpful when completing this assignment: “WATERFALL vs. AGILE METHODOLOGY” (You may also view the article at http://agileintro.wordpress.com/2008/01/04/waterfall-vs-agile-methodology/.) “Understanding the pros and cons of the Waterfall Model of software development” (You may also view the article at http://www.techrepublic.com/article/understanding-the-pros-and-cons-of-the-waterfall-model-of-software-development/6118423.) “Transitioning from waterfall to iterative development” (You may also view the article at http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/rational/library/4243.html.) Agile approach to project management has become more and more popular in recent years. Agile framework is different from traditional waterfall model. It has considerable impact on how projects are planned and executed. Imagine that you have been assigned as a project manager to manage your company’s e-Commerce Website where customers can browse the company’s products, place orders, and interact with the company’s customer service representatives. Your project must be completed in three (3) months and you have about twelve (12) people in the team. There are three (3) offshore developers in Ireland and two (2) QA testers in Dallas, TX. The rest of the project team and the product owner are in San Diego, CA. Write a five to six (5-6) page paper in which you: Compare and contrast agile and Waterfall models of managing a project in the context of building an e-Commerce Website. Include diagrams or tables through the use of graphical tools in Microsoft Word or Visio, or an open source alternative such as Dia to show the differences and similarities. Note: The graphically depicted solution is not included in the required page length. Evaluate the pros and cons in agile and Waterfall project management in terms of planning and the execution of projects and collaboration among project team members. Determine whether you would use an “Agile” or “Waterfall” model to manage the project for your company. Support your rationale. Identify and analyze the major pitfalls and misconceptions inherited in your chosen approach. Propose key actions that you, as a project manager, could take in order to mitigate the risks associated with the previously identified misconceptions. Use at least three (3) quality resources in this assignment. Note: Wikipedia and similar Websites do not qualify as quality resources. You may use the resources above or others of your choosing. Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements: Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions. Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length. Include charts or diagrams created in Visio or one of their equivalents such as Dia and OpenOffice. The completed diagrams / charts must be imported into the Word document before the paper is submitted. The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are: Compare and contrast agile project management methods with traditional project management. Use technology and information resources to research issues in advanced agile project management topics. Write clearly and concisely about advanced agile project management topics using proper writing mechanics and technical style conventions. Click here to view the grading rubric.
w2_assignment_1___agile_versus_waterfall_.docx
transitioning_from_waterfall_to_iterative_development.pdf
understanding_the_pros_and_cons_of_the_waterfall_model_of_software_development___techrepublic.pdf
waterfall_vs._agile_methodology___agile_introduction_for_dummies.pdf
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525W2 Assignment 1 - Agile versus Waterfall
Assignment 1: Agile versus Waterfall
Worth 110 points
The following resources may be helpful when completing this assignment:
•
“WATERFALL vs. AGILE METHODOLOGY” (You may also view the article
at http://agileintro.wordpress.com/2008/01/04/waterfall-vs-agile-methodology/.)
•
“Understanding the pros and cons of the Waterfall Model of software development” (You may
also view the article at http://www.techrepublic.com/article/understanding-the-pros-and-consof-the-waterfall-model-of-software-development/6118423.)
•
“Transitioning from waterfall to iterative development” (You may also view the article
at http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/rational/library/4243.html.)
Agile approach to project management has become more and more popular in recent years. Agile
framework is different from traditional waterfall model. It has considerable impact on how projects are
planned and executed.
Imagine that you have been assigned as a project manager to manage your company’s e-Commerce
Website where customers can browse the company’s products, place orders, and interact with the
company’s customer service representatives. Your project must be completed in three (3) months and
you have about twelve (12) people in the team. There are three (3) offshore developers in Ireland and
two (2) QA testers in Dallas, TX. The rest of the project team and the product owner are in San Diego,
CA.
Write a five to six (5-6) page paper in which you:
1. Compare and contrast agile and Waterfall models of managing a project in the context of
building an e-Commerce Website. Include diagrams or tables through the use of graphical tools
in Microsoft Word or Visio, or an open source alternative such as Dia to show the differences
and similarities. Note: The graphically depicted solution is not included in the required page
length.
2. Evaluate the pros and cons in agile and Waterfall project management in terms of planning and
the execution of projects and collaboration among project team members.
3. Determine whether you would use an “Agile” or “Waterfall” model to manage the project for
your company. Support your rationale.
4. Identify and analyze the major pitfalls and misconceptions inherited in your chosen approach.
Propose key actions that you, as a project manager, could take in order to mitigate the risks
associated with the previously identified misconceptions.
5. Use at least three (3) quality resources in this assignment. Note: Wikipedia and similar Websites
do not qualify as quality resources. You may use the resources above or others of your choosing.
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:
•
Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all
sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your
professor for any additional instructions.
•
Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s
name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in
the required assignment page length.
•
Include charts or diagrams created in Visio or one of their equivalents such as Dia and
OpenOffice. The completed diagrams / charts must be imported into the Word document
before the paper is submitted.
The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:
•
Compare and contrast agile project management methods with traditional project
management.
•
Use technology and information resources to research issues in advanced agile project
management topics.
•
Write clearly and concisely about advanced agile project management topics using proper
writing mechanics and technical style conventions.
Click here to view the grading rubric.
1/13/2020
Transitioning from waterfall to iterative development
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Contents
Learn
› Rational
Introduction
Transitioning from waterfall to iterat
development
Advantages of an iterative approach
Four steps for a transition
Many ways to apply these steps
Notes
Per Kroll
Published
on April 16, 2004
Downloadable
resources
Comments
https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/rational/library/4243.html
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Transitioning from waterfall to iterative development
Most software teams still use a waterfall process for development projects. Taking an extreme w
you complete a number of phases in a strictly ordered sequence: requirements analysis, design
and then testing. You also defer testing until the end of the project lifecycle, when problems ten
resolve; these problems can also pose serious threats to release deadlines and leave key team
periods of time.
In practice, most teams use a modified waterfall approach, breaking the project down into two o
called phases or stages. This helps to simplify integration, get testers testing earlier, and provid
status. This approach also breaks up the code into manageable pieces and minimizes the integr
and drivers, required for testing. In addition, this approach allows you to prototype areas you de
feedback from each stage to modify your design. However, that runs counter to the thinking beh
Contents
Many design teams would view modifying the design after Stage 1 as a failure of their initial des
And
although a modified waterfall approach does not preclude the use of feedback, it does not
Introduction
encourage it. And finally, the desire to minimize risk does not typically drive a waterfall project.
Advantages of an iterative approach
improvements that an iterative approach to the software development process offers over the
Four steps for a transition
Many ways to apply these steps
Advantages
of an iterative approach
Notes
In contrast, an iterative approach -- like the one embodied in IBM Rational Unified Process® or
Downloadablesteps,
resources
incremental
or iterations. Each iteration includes some, or most, of the development disc
analysis, design, implementation, and so on), as you can see in Figure 1. Each iteration also has
Comments
objectives and produces a partial working implementation of the final system. And each succes
work of previous iterations to evolve and refine the system until the final product is complete.
Early iterations emphasize requirements as well as analysis and design; later iterations emphas
testing.
Figure 1: Iterative development with RUP. Each iteration includes
analysis, design, implementation and testing activities. Also, eac
the work of previous iterations to produce an executable that is o
final product.
The iterative approach has proven itself superior to the waterfall approach for a number of reas
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•
Transitioning from waterfall to iterative development
It accommodates changing requirements. Changes in requirements and feature creep -are technology- or customer-driven -- have always been primary sources of project trouble,
dissatisfied customers, and frustrated developers. To address these problems, teams who u
on producing and demonstrating executable software in the first few weeks, which forces a
helps to pare them down to essentials.
•
Integration is not one big bang at the end of a project. Leaving integration to the end alm
consuming rework -- sometimes up to 40 percent of the total project effort. To avoid this, ea
integrating building blocks; this happens progressively and continuously, minimizing later re
•
Early iterations expose risks. An iterative approach helps the team mitigate risks in early ite
for all process components. As each iteration engages many aspects of the project -- tools,
Contents
members skills, and so on -- teams can quickly discover whether perceived risks are real an
not suspect, at a time when these problems are relatively easy and less costly to address.
Introduction
•
Management can make tactical changes to the product. Iterative development quickly pro
Advantages of an iterative approach
architecture (albeit of limited functionality) that can be readily translated into a lite or mo
Fourrelease
steps fortoa counter
transitiona competitors move.
•
It facilitates reuse. It is easier to identify common parts as you partially design or impleme
Many ways to apply these steps
recognize them during planning. Design reviews in early iterations allow architects to spot p
Notes
reuse, and then develop and mature common code for these opportunities in subsequent ite
•
You can find
and correct defects over several iterations. This results in a robust architectu
Downloadable
resources
application. You can detect flaws even in early iterations rather than during a massive testin
Comments
can discover performance bottlenecks when you can still address them without destroying y
panic on the eve of delivery.
•
It facilitates better use of project personnel. Many organizations match their waterfall app
organization: Analysts send the completed requirements to designers, who send a complete
send components to integrators, who send a system for test to testers. These multiple hand
misunderstandings; they also make people feel less responsible for the final product. An ite
wider scope of activities for team members, allowing them to play many roles. Project mana
staff and eliminate risky handoffs.
•
Team members learn along the way. Those working on iterative projects have many opport
development lifecycle to learn from their mistakes and improve their skills from one iteratio
each iteration, project managers can discover training opportunities for team members. In c
waterfall projects are typically confined to narrow specialties and have only one shot at des
•
You can refine the development process along the way. End-of-iteration assessments not
project from a product or scheduling perspective; they also help managers analyze how to i
and the process in the next iteration.
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Transitioning from waterfall to iterative development
Some project managers resist adopting an iterative approach, seeing it as a form of endless, un
RUP the entire project is tightly controlled. The number, duration, and objectives of iterations ar
tasks and responsibilities of participants are well defined. In addition, objective measures of pr
the team does rework some things from one iteration to the next, this work, too, is carefully con
Four steps for a transition
Most waterfall projects divide the development work into phases or stages; we can also view th
iterative design. But then, to move to an iterative approach, we would apply different process p
Contents
four steps:
Introduction
1. Build functional prototypes early.
Advantages
of an
iterativedesign,
approach
2. Divide the
detailed
implementation and test phases into iterations.
3. Baseline
antransition
executable architecture early on.
Four
steps for a
4. Adopt an iterative and risk-driven management process.
Many ways to apply these steps
Lets
Notesexamine each of these steps more closely.
Downloadable resources
Step
1: Build functional prototypes early
Comments
As a first step toward iterative development, consider one or more functional prototypes during
phases. The objectives of these prototypes are to mitigate key technical risks and clarify stakeh
the system should do.
Start by identifying the top three technical risks and the top three functional areas in need of cla
might relate to new technology, pending technology decisions that will greatly affect the overal
requirements that you know will be hard to meet. Functional risks might relate to areas in which
fuzzy requirements for critical functionality, or to several requirements that are core to the syste
For each of the key technical risks, outline what prototyping you need to do to mitigate the risks
examples:
Technical risk: The project requires porting an existing application to run on top of IBM WebSph
are already complaining about the applications performance, and you are concerned that portin
even more.
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Prototype: Build an architectural prototype to try out different approaches for porting your app
WebSphere architect to help you. Evaluate the results and write architectural and design guidel
dos and donts. This will increase the likelihood that your ported applications performance will
rework late in the project.
Technical risk: You are building a new application for scheduling and estimating software proje
differentiator for this application versus off-the-shelf products will be how well it supports itera
also one of the fuzziest areas in your requirement specification.
Prototype: Build a functional prototype based on your assumptions about how to support iterat
Contents
demonstrating the prototype to various stakeholders, you will encourage them to pay more atte
which of your assumptions they agree or disagree with. The prototype will help you clarify the p
Introduction
provide you with useful information about the user experience and look and feel for your applic
reusable
code.
Advantages
of an iterative approach
Four steps for a transition
Step
2:toDivide
the
detailed design, implementation and test phas
Many ways
apply these
steps
Notes project teams find it hard to divide a project into meaningful iterations before they know w
Many
But
when youresources
are ready to enter the detailed design phase, you typically have a good understan
Downloadable
are, and what the architecture will look like. Its time to try out iterative development!
Comments
You can use two main approaches to determine what should be done in what iteration. Lets dis
approach.
Approach 1: Develop one or more subsystems at a time. Lets assume that you have nine subsystem
numbers of components. You can divide the detailed design, implementation and test phase into thre
implementing three of the nine subsystems. This will work reasonably well if there are limited depend
subsystems. For example, if your nine subsystems each provided a well-defined set of capabilities to
the highest priority subsystems in the first iteration, the second most important subsystems in the se
approach has a great advantage: If you run out of time, you can still deliver a partial system with the m
and running.
However, this approach does not work well if you have a layered architecture, with subsystems in the
capabilities of subsystems in the lower layers. If you had to build one subsystem at a time, such an ar
build the bottom layer subsystems first, and then go higher and higher up. But to build the right capab
typically need to do a fair amount of detailed design and implementation work on the upper layers, be
need in the lower layers. This creates a catch-22; the second approach explains how to resolve it.
Approach 2: Develop the most critical scenarios first. If you use Approach 1, you develop one subsy
you focus instead on key scenarios, or key ways of using the system, and then add more of the less es
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Transitioning from waterfall to iterative development
different from Approach 1? Lets look at an example.
Suppose you are building a new application that will provide users the ability to manage defects. It is
of WebSphere Application Server, with DB2 as the underlying database. In the first iteration, you deve
as entering a simple defect, with no underlying state engine. In the second iteration, you add complex
example, you might enable the defect to handle a workflow. In the third iteration, you complete the d
providing full support for atypical user entries, such as capability to save a partial defect entry and the
With this approach, you work on all the subsystems in all iterations, but you still focus in the first itera
and save what is least important or least difficult for the last iteration.
Approach 1 is more appropriate if you are working on a system with a well-defined architecture
existing application or developing a new application with a simple architecture, for example. Mo
Contents
applications should use Approach 2, but they should plan the iterations in such a way that they
iterations to make up for possible schedule delays.
Introduction
Advantages of an iterative approach
Step 3: Baseline an executable architecture early on.
Four steps for a transition
You
view
this step
a much more formal and organized way of doing Step 1: Build function
Manycan
ways
to apply
theseas
steps
what is an executable architecture?
Notes
An
executableresources
architecture is a partial implementation of the system, built to demonstrate that
Downloadable
support the key functionality. Even more important, it demonstrates that the design will meet re
Comments capacity, reliability, scalability, and other -ilities. Establishing an executable archi
throughput,
the systems functional capability on a solid foundation during later phases, without fear of brea
architecture is an evolutionary prototype, intended to retain proven features and those with a hi
system requirements when the architecture is mature. In other words, these features will be pa
contrast to the functional prototype you would typically build in step 1, the evolutionary prototy
architectural issues.
Producing an evolutionary prototype means that you design, implement, and test a skeleton str
system. The functionality at the application level will not be complete, but as most interfaces be
implemented, you can (and should) compile and test the architecture to some extent. Conduct
tests. This prototype also reflects your critical design decisions, including choices about techno
their interfaces; it is built after you have assessed buy versus build options and after you have d
architectural mechanisms and patterns.
But how do you come up with the architecture for this evolutionary prototype? The key is to foc
30 percent of use cases (complete services the system offers to the end users). Here are some
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Transitioning from waterfall to iterative development
cases are most important.
•
The functionality is the core of the application, or it exercises key interfaces. The system
determine the architecture. Typically an architect identifies the most important use cases by
redundancy management strategies, resource contention risks, performance risks, data sec
example, in a point-of-sale (POS) system, Check Out and Pay would be a key use case becau
a credit card validation system -- and it is critical from a performance and load perspective.
•
Choose use cases describing functionality that must be delivered. Delivering an applicatio
would be fruitless. For example, an order-entry system would be unacceptable if it did not a
Typically, domain and subject-matter experts understand the key functionality required from
behaviors, peak data transaction, critical control transactions, etc.), and they help define cri
Contents
•
Choose use cases describing functionality for an area of the architecture not covered by a
Introduction
ensure that your team will address all major technical risks, they must understand each are
certain of
area
of the architecture
does not appear to be high risk, it may conceal technical diffi
Advantages
an iterative
approach
only by designing, implementing, and testing some of the functionality within that area.
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Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident