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Agile Uncovered: Understanding What Agile Really Means?

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Agile is about flexibility, collaboration, and customer satisfaction. Agile helps you keep up. We’re going to dig into Agile. We’ll also look at how Agile has evolved over time and why it’s more relevant today than ever before. The Origins of Agile Agile didn’t just emerge out of nowhere.

Agile 52
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Product Manager vs. Product Owner

Melissa Perri

Let’s look at where these terms and disciplines originated from and how some common frameworks explain them. It was all the same work I had been doing before, but now it had a different name. I liked this name. That was until I had my first experience teaching Product Management at a company using the SAFe framework.

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The Collision of Product Management and Product Ownership

The Product Coalition

A story of love, hate, oppression and triumph I’ll admit, I’ve started to fall out of love with agile over the past year or so?—?don’t I wholeheartedly believe that you need to be adaptable to survive today but the further I travel on my own journey the more I wonder if we as an industry are moving past agile. Enter agile.

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The Many Flavors Of Agile: What’s The Right One For Your Team? | Bethany Pagels-Minor, Apple | BoS USA 2018

Business of Software Conference

Agile methodology sounds confusing and difficult, but Bethany Pagels-Minor breaks it down to bite-size slices of delicious cakes that will will help every team work better, communicate better, and provide better returns. It’s called ‘the many flavors of agile and what’s the right one for your team?’ Unsubscribe anytime.

Agile 61
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The Evolution of Modern Product Discovery

Product Talk

My goal was to put our varied methodologies and techniques (Lean, Agile, Jobs-to-be-Done, design thinking, etc.) The Agile Manifesto [7:06]. The Jobs-To-Be-Done Framework: Clayton Christensen and Anthony Ulwick [10:42]. Other Links: The Agile Manifesto. Jobs-to-be-Done Framework. Show Notes: Introduction [:26].

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Idea Validation?—?Much More Than Just A/B Experiments

The Product Coalition

The programs go by different names?—?early The MVP Principle The term Minimum Viable Product was first used by Frank Robinson in 2001 to describe the minimal product that can be sold to customers. In 2001 this outcomes-over-output message was definitely very new. Agile/Kanban is perfectly good here.