ADAPT collects reference material relevant to the subjects of Agile, Lean and IT Acquisition. These are used and referenced in its efforts to create reports and thought-pieces on these topics. ADAPT is building a reference libary to assist others in understanding the various perspectives on adoption of Agile methods in government.
To contribute reference materials to this working compilation, please contact Tammy Kicker at [email protected], or contact one of the Product Owners to discuss its relevance.
RESOURCES
ADAPT Documents
GAO Schedule Assessment Guide
GAO-12-12OG
GAO Schedule Assessment Guide |
GAO Schedule Assessment Guide Best Practices for project schedules
May 2012 |
Modular Approaches for Information Technology |
Contracting Guidance to Support Modular Development June 14, 2012 |
Draft ADAPT Charter
Draft Charter |
Establishes basic operation, purpose and overall governance guidance for ADAPT as an AFEI/NDIA sanctioned working group.
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Business Case for Agile
Agile ROI Report
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A compilation of information on return on investment information gleaned from case studies and writings on the subject. Report was prepared as input to funding deliberations in USD (AT&L) on Agile Methods for DoD.
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Reference Documents
David Rico Brief on Agile ROI
ROI Briefing |
Updated Briefing from Dr. David Rico on metrics and Return on Investment for Agile projects. |
GAO Report on Agile
GAO-12-681
GAO Report |
GAO report in July 2012 on best practices and approaches for applying agile software development methods to IT projects, "Effective Practices and Federal Challenges in Applying Agile Methods". |
Handbook for Implementing Agile in Department of Defense Information Technology Acquisition
MITRE Corp.
MITRE Technical Report MTR100489
Handbook
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This report includes background information on Agile principles and methodologies from peer-reviewed industry and academic materials, MITRE technical reports, as well as interviews with members of DOD Programs that have implemented Agile development methodologies. It describes how Agile development principles can be applied to an IT systems engineering effort, and explains how an Agile methodology could be used to benefit DOD Government acquisition and development programs.
December 2010 |
Considerations for Using Agile in DoD Acquisition
Software Engineering Institute
TECHNICAL NOTE CMU/SEI-2010-TN-002
Report
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This report explores the questions: Can Agile be used in the DoD environment? If so, how? Lessons learned from actual DoD programs that have employed and are employing Agile are provided as well as information gleaned from the myriad articles and books available on Agile. While this report does not pretend to cover every paper or thought published about Agile in the DoD world, it provides an overview of some challenges in using Agile; an overview of how some programs have addressed these challenges; and some additional recommendations on dealing with these challenges.
April 2010 |
DoD CIO Presentation
Slides |
Presentation by DoD CIO Teri Takai addressing DoD IT Strategy.
April 2011
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Scrum and CMMI Level 5: The Magic Potion for Code Warriors
Sutherland, Jakobson, Johnson
Paper |
Projects combining agile methods with CMMI are more successful in producing higher quality software that more effectively meets customer needs at a faster pace. Systematic Software Engineering works at CMMI level 5 and uses Lean Software Development as a driver for optimizing software processes. Valuable experience has been gained by combining Agile practices from Scrum with CMMI. |
IT Project Success Survey May-June 2010
Scott W. Ambler www.ambysoft.com/scottAmbler.html
Slides
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Scott Ambler Presentation - "I have provided these slides, and the raw data behind them, so that others can use them in their own work. You may reuse all, or a part of, this slide deck as long as you provide a clear reference to the source. The suggested reference is: Results from Scott Ambler’s 2010 IT Project Success Survey posted at www.agilemodeling.com/surveys/ "
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What is the Return on Investment (ROI) of Agile Methods?
David F. Rico
Paper
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The ROI of agile methods is yet to be fully explored because of their newness, while the ROI of traditional methods is well-understood. Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to investigate and summarize the literature on the ROI of agile methods. These results show that the use of agile methods results in increased cost-effectiveness, productivity, quality, cycle-time reduction, and customer satisfaction ranging from 10% to 100%.
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