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What is Agile development?

Agile development is a term that's used to describe iterative software development. Iterative software development shortens the DevOps life cycle by completing work in short increments, usually called sprints. Sprints are typically one to four weeks long. Agile development is often contrasted with traditional or waterfall development, which plans larger projects up front and completes them according to the plan.

Delivering production quality code every sprint requires the Agile development team to account for an accelerated pace. All coding, testing, and quality verification must be done each and every sprint. Unless a team is properly set up, the results can fall short of expectations. While these disappointments offer great learning opportunities, it's helpful to learn some key lessons before getting started.

This article lays out a few key success factors for Agile development teams:

  • Diligent backlog refinement
  • Integrating early and often
  • Minimizing technical debt

Diligent backlog refinement

An Agile development team works off a backlog of requirements, which are often called user stories. The backlog is prioritized, with the most important user stories at the top. The product owner owns the backlog and adds, changes, and reprioritizes user stories based on the customer's needs.

Image of a Kanban board that contains several columns. In each column, a few cards are visible.

One of the biggest drags on an Agile team's productivity is a poorly defined backlog. A team can't be expected to consistently deliver high quality software each sprint unless they have clearly defined requirements.

The product owner's job is to ensure that every sprint, the engineers have clearly defined user stories to work with. The user stories at the top of the backlog should always be ready for the team to start on. This notion is called backlog refinement. Keeping a backlog ready for an Agile development team requires effort and discipline. Fortunately, it's well worth the investment.

When you refine a backlog, remember the following key considerations.

  1. Refining user stories is often a long-lead activity. Elegant user interfaces, beautiful screen designs, and customer-delighting solutions all take time and energy to create. Diligent product owners refine user stories two to three sprints in advance. They account for design iterations and customer reviews. They work to ensure every user story is something the Agile team is proud to deliver to the customer.

  2. A user story isn't refined unless the team says it is. The team needs to review the user story and agree it's ready to work on. If a team doesn't see the user story until day one of a sprint, problems can likely result.

  3. User stories further down the backlog can remain ambiguous. Don't waste time refining lower-priority items. Focus on the top of the backlog.

Integrate early and often

Continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) set up your team for the fast pace of Agile development. As soon as possible, automate the build, test, and deployment pipelines. Set up that automation as one of the first tasks your team tackles when you start a new project.

With automation, the team avoids slow, error-prone, and time-intensive manual deployment processes. Since teams release every sprint, there isn't time to do these tasks manually.

CI/CD also influences your software architecture. It ensures you deliver buildable and deployable software. When teams implement a difficult-to-deploy feature, they become aware immediately if the build and deployments fail. CI/CD forces a team to fix deployment issues as they occur. The product is then always ready to ship.

Abstract bar chart that shows the status of CI builds over time. Most builds succeeded. Only a few failed.

There are some key CI/CD activities that are critically important for effective Agile development.

  1. Unit testing. Unit tests are the first defense against human error. Consider unit tests a part of coding. Check tests in with the code. Make unit testing a part of every build. Failed unit tests mean a failed build.

  2. Build automation. The build system should automatically pull code and tests directly from source control when builds run.

  3. Branch and build policies. Configure branch and build policies to build automatically as the team checks code in to a specific branch.

  4. Deploy to an environment. Set up a release pipeline that automatically deploys built projects to an environment that mimics production.

Minimize technical debt

With personal finances, it's easier to stay out of debt than to dig out from under it. The same rule applies with technical debt. Technical debt includes anything that the team must address because of shortcuts that were taken earlier. For instance, if you're on a tight schedule, you might sacrifice quality to meet a deadline. Technical debt is the price you pay later, when you have to refactor code to make up for that lack of quality. Examples include fixes to address poor design, bugs, performance issues, operational issues, accessibility concerns, and other issues.

Keeping on top of technical debt requires courage. There are many pressures to delay reworking code. It feels good to work on features and ignore debt. Unfortunately, somebody must pay off the technical debt sooner or later. Just like financial debt, technical debt becomes harder to pay off the longer it exists. A smart product owner works with their team to ensure there's time to pay off technical debt every sprint. Balancing technical debt reduction with feature development is a difficult task. Fortunately, there are some straightforward techniques for creating productive, customer-focused teams.

Always be Agile

Being Agile means learning from experience and continually improving. Agile development provides more learning cycles than traditional project planning due to the tighter process loops. Each sprint provides something new for the team to learn.

For example:

  • A team delivers value to the customer, gets feedback, and then modifies their backlog based on that feedback.
  • They learn that their automated builds are missing key tests. They include work in their next sprint to address this issue.
  • They find that certain features perform poorly in production, so they make plans to improve performance.
  • Someone on the team hears of a new practice. The team decides to try it out for a few sprints.

Teams that are just starting with Agile development should expect more learning opportunities. They're an invaluable part of the process because they lead to growth and improvement.

Next steps

There are many ways to settle on an Agile development process that's right for a team. Azure DevOps provides various process templates. Teams that are looking for different baseline structures to their planning can use these templates as starting points. For information about selecting a process template that best fits a team's culture and goals, see Choose a process flow or process template to work in Azure Boards.

As organizations grow, it can be a challenge to stay disciplined. Learn more about scaling Agile to large teams.