Getting Started
The first thing we recognized is that when you practice agile, it establishes and formalizes the timing of your release cycle. We try (and almost always succeed) releasing at the end of each iteration. So for our offshore teams, we either needed to align their releases with our onshore teams practicing agile, or we needed to establish a separate release cycle. The latter just wouldn’t work because of product dependencies between the on and offshore teams. So very quickly we needed our offshore team to practice iterative development and release cycles.
From Iterative to Agile
Once we optimized around iterative delivery, there was a collective effort between members of my team as well as our offshore partner to move to agile development. Some key steps in making this work:
- Invest in basic training. If you’re practicing SCRUM, make key members of your teams have some basic training.
- When recruiting new members, look for people with experience on agile projects
- Make sure your offshore team members have some understanding of the business, product, and even competition before going agile.
- Whiteboards and stickies won’t cut it when you go offshore. You better have some maturity with an agile project tool before going offshore.
- Consider on site staffing needs, communication processes, and escalation processes to help establish the practice.
- Make sure you schedule face to face visits. We had one member of my staff work offshore for three weeks. We also brought one of our offshore developers come on site for a few weeks.
Finally, agile development is always a work in progress. Once you have agile working, make sure your process improvement considers how to improve both on site and offshore delivery.






















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