Identifying some important success factors in adopting agile software development practices

  • Authors:
  • Subhas Chandra Misra;Vinod Kumar;Uma Kumar

  • Affiliations:
  • Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kanpur, India;Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada;Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada

  • Venue:
  • Journal of Systems and Software
  • Year:
  • 2009

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Abstract

Agile software development (ASD) is an emerging approach in software engineering, initially advocated by a group of 17 software professionals who practice a set of ''lightweight'' methods, and share a common set of values of software development. In this paper, we advance the state-of-the-art of the research in this area by conducting a survey-based ex-post-facto study for identifying factors from the perspective of the ASD practitioners that will influence the success of projects that adopt ASD practices. In this paper, we describe a hypothetical success factors framework we developed to address our research question, the hypotheses we conjectured, the research methodology, the data analysis techniques we used to validate the hypotheses, and the results we obtained from data analysis. The study was conducted using an unprecedentedly large-scale survey-based methodology, consisting of respondents who practice ASD and who had experience practicing plan-driven software development in the past. The study indicates that nine of the 14 hypothesized factors have statistically significant relationship with ''Success''. The important success factors that were found are: customer satisfaction, customer collaboration, customer commitment, decision time, corporate culture, control, personal characteristics, societal culture, and training and learning.