The Agile Samurai Bootcamp
Tags: Agile
Everything you need to setup, execute, and successfully deliver your own Agile project.
Last updated 2022-01-10 | 4.4
- A thorough understanding of how Agile works- how it's different from traditional Waterfall
- and the mindset necessary to transformation your organization and team
- A deep
- thorough
- understanding of how Agile User stories
- Estimation and Planning work
- How to form effective Agile teams
- and what to look for in quality players
What you'll learn
* Requirements
* Pen* paper
* and fierce desire to learn
Description
Get ready to kick some software project butt.
Enter the world of the Agile Samurai, where the most dire of software projects are dispatched with ease and grace. By learning the ways of the Agile Samurai you will discover:
What Agile is, how it works, and the mindset necessary for working iteratively
Common myths and pitfalls and how to choose the right Agile method for you
How to build a good Agile team
How from traditional waterfall roles (like developer, analyst, tester, and project manager) change on Agile project
How to create a plan you and your customer can believe in
How to gather requirements in a fraction of the time using Agile User Stories
How to deliver something of value every week
What to do when the schedule is wrong, and how to look like a pro correcting it, and
The four essential Agile Engineering practices and why they are so important for Agility.
By the end of this course you’ll have everything you need to successfully set up, execute, and deliver your own Agile project.
Course Outline
Agile In a Nutshell
What Agile is, how it works, and how to choose the right Agile method for you.
Agile Teams
What makes the Agile team tick. Characteristics of good Agile teams. And how to find quality players.
User Stories
In this session we break down what user stories are, how they work, what effective user stories look like for your project, and how to host great story gathering work shops.
Estimation
By learning how to estimate the Agile way, you’ll stop trying to get something your up-front estimates can’t give (precision and accuracy) and instead focus on what really matters—building a plan you and your customer can believe in.
Planning
In this session, you’re going to learn how to create plans you can believe in and follow through on commitments you and your team make.
Iteration Mechanics
This session shows teams how to set the iterations up for success, breaks down what actually occurs during an iteration, and how to setup an agile communication plan for you and your team.
Visible Workspaces
By learning how to create a visual workspace, you and the team will never be at a loss for what to do next or where you can add the greatest value.
Engineering
Agile doesn’t work on planning alone. That would be wishful thinking. Only by apply these core software engineering practices can you reduce the time it takes to test, ensure you always have a good design, and confidently make necessary changes with speed.
Unit Testing - Automated tests proving your software works
Refactoring - Paying down technical debt, while continuously improving your design
Test-Driven Development - Write the tests first to help improve your design
Continuous Integration - Maintaining a culture of production readiness, and deploying at a moments notice
Intended Audience
This is an introductory level course on Agile software delivery.
Course Requirements
No previous experience with Agile expected or necessary.
Instructional Level
All Levels
Update NEW FAQ Section April 2017
New FAQ section added answering most commonly asked questions
New templates section added containing downloadable examples of burn down charts
Update NEW Cheat Sheet Section August 2018
New section summarizing key concepts in downloadable pdf
Who this course is for:
- Beginners
- Assumes no prior knowledge of Agile of software development
Course content
11 sections • 34 lectures
Introduction Preview 02:30
Value Every Week Preview 06:35
How Is Agile Different? Preview 04:29
Agile Myths Preview 03:45
Which Method Is Right For Me? Preview 08:16
Agile Teams Preview 20:44
The Problem With Documentation Preview 04:09
Elements of Good User Stories Preview 11:13
How to Host a Story-Gathering Workshop Preview 06:16
The Fine Art of Guessing Preview 13:25
The Problem With Static Plans Preview 02:46
The Agile Plan Preview 02:23
Flexing on Scope Preview 02:54
Your First Plan Preview 06:42
The Burndown Chart Preview 02:11
Burndown chart examples Preview 00:11
The Planning Dojo Preview 08:15
How to Deliver Something of Value Every Week Preview 01:57
The Agile Iteration Preview 01:04
How it all Works Preview 10:09
Four Things to do During Any Iteration Preview 07:24
How Not To Host a Daily Standup Preview 02:22
The Iteration Mechanics Dojo Preview 04:51
How To Setup a Visual Workspace Preview 05:09
Unit Testing Preview 08:09
Refactoring Preview 08:48
Test-Driven Development Preview 07:25
Continuous Integration Preview 10:41
Final Words Preview 04:20
What software to you recommend for Agile Project Management and visualization? Preview 03:23
Physical board is best.
But Jira and Trello are pretty good too if your teams are distributed.
How does Agile work if you are a solo founder in a startup? Preview 02:22
The Lean Startup
https://www.amazon.com/Lean-Startup-Entrepreneurs-Continuous-Innovation/dp/0307887898
How do you create a burn down chart? Preview 01:42
http://www.agilenutshell.com/episodes/6-burndown-charts