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I’ll now go over each sentence starting with the first sentence:
We are uncovering better ways of developing software by doing it and helping others do it.
The Agile Manifesto and the 12 Principles of Agile together serve as the foundation of Agile practices. Rather than prescribing how to “do” Agile, Agile describes ways of working that steer away from a bureaucratic, command-and-control style of management to a decentralized, self-organized, and adaptive approach to building and delivering software systems.
Next, I skip to the last sentence:
That is, while there is value in the items on the right, we value the items on the left more.
The Agile Manifesto states a preference for lightweight processes supported by face-to-face communication and sustained and meaningful engagement between technical teams, project sponsors and stakeholders, and customers and end users. It does not prohibit traditional project management practices such as communicating via documentation, instituting processes, leveraging tools, planning activities, and engaging in contract negotiations. Agile does not prohibit them because they are all necessary, to some extent, for any technical project to succeed. What Agile argues against is measuring progress based on accomplishing these internal project activities. Agile argues for determining project progress based on delivery of useful and valuable solution functionality and structuring both the work and how teams are organized to best incorporate changing requirements and lessons learned into emerging software solutions.
Now I continue with the first tenet:
Individuals and interactions over processes and tools
Software development is a creative endeavor. As such, people are at the heart of it. Tools and processes should support open and direct collaboration between people, not serve as substitutes for it. Using what are often described as “Agile tools” such as JIRA or VersionOne does not equate to working in an Agile way. Processes do not make up for a lack of training and support for those who do the work. A focus on improving people, and the teams they work in, yields much greater dividends than instituting processes and using tools.
The second tenet:
Working software over comprehensive documentation
The only real way to verify and validate solutions and gauge project progress is by developing and delivering working functionality. However, documentation is necessary, even in Agile projects.
There is no magic formula for striking the right balance. Collaboration between technical teams, sponsors, stakeholders, customers and end users will bring to light what documentation is necessary and to what level of detail. Just keep in mind that, when it comes to documentation, “less is more”.
It is also important to remember that documentation has inherent drawbacks. It is often out of date, its usefulness is often time limited, and it can be a source of confusion. Think hard over these drawbacks before engaging in documentation activities to ensure they are worth the effort.The third tenet:
Customer collaboration over contract negotiationTraditional project management focuses on contract negotiation and enforcement, often to the detriment of collaboration. While Agile projects are also bound by contracts, the focus is on fostering a win-win atmosphere of collaboration between those who develop and deliver software and those who sponsor and use it. Collaboration in Agile occurs across the entire .The fourth tenet:
Responding to change over following a plan
For most non-trivial software development projects, predictive planning is the wrong approach. Software is intangible and infinitely changeable. The opportunities to change a software system are as infinite as the number of reasons to change it. Predictive software development plans do not survive first contact with project reality.