7 | 2004
It's a Big Tent
Agile project management can cover a wide range of projects and organizational cultures. Given the right structuring, APM can coexist with other project management frameworks — even the PMI's PMBOK Guide® or the SEI's CMMI®.

It Can't Be All Things to All People
The principles and practices of agile project management are incompatible with the PMBOK, Six Sigma, or CMMI. When the prevailing culture stresses prescriptive planning and execution, APM is not a good choice. Politics always trump process — any process.
"We need to incorporate project managers into the agile quest, not attempt to keep them on the outside looking in."
- Jim Highsmith, Guest Editor

Next Issue

Analyzing IT ROI: Can We Prove the Value?

Guest Editor: Mark Cotteleer
Business and IT professionals have wrestled for decades with the challenge of building business cases. Our CFOs remind us that our fiduciary responsibility to our shareholders includes investing the firm's capital wisely (translation: only where IT can prove a return). Yet experts wonder if a business case even exists for many projects, and we continue to hear cries of “Nobody believes the ROI” from the trenches. Next month, explore the issues that prevent managers from believing ROI analyses — and find out how you can build ROI competence and credibility within your organization.

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In our next installment on the evolution of agile project management, we witness the many faces of agile. While Cutter Consortium Senior Consultant Doug DeCarlo discusses the role of the Extreme Project Manager and ponders a project's "energy field," Donna Fitzgerald shows how agile and the PMBOK can find common ground. And David Anderson sees XP as a stalking horse for ... Six Sigma?