Selected Product: | Agile Project Management with Scrum Paperback Author: Ken Schwaber Publisher: Microsoft Press Release Date: 2004-03-10 ISBN-10: 073561993X ISBN-13: 9780735619937 List Price: $39.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Agile Software Development with SCRUM (Series in Agile Software Development) ISBN-10: 0130676349 ISBN-13: 9780130676344 List Price:$43.00 User Stories Applied: For Agile Software Development (The Addison-Wesley Signature Series) ISBN-10: 0321205685 ISBN-13: 0785342205688 List Price:$44.99 User Stories Applied: For Agile Software Development (Addison-Wesley Signature Series) ISBN-10: 0321205685 ISBN-13: 9780321205681 List Price:$49.99 Agile Estimating and Planning (Robert C. Martin Series) ISBN-10: 0131479415 ISBN-13: 9780131479418 List Price:$49.99 Agile and Iterative Development: A Manager's Guide ISBN-10: 0131111558 ISBN-13: 0076092021711 List Price:$44.99 Agile and Iterative Development: A Manager's Guide (Agile Software Development Series) ISBN-10: 0131111558 ISBN-13: 9780131111554 List Price:$46.99 The Enterprise and Scrum ISBN-10: 0735623376 ISBN-13: 9780735623378 List Price:$39.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Agile Project Management with Scrum by Ken Schwaber (ISBN-10: 073561993X, ISBN-13: 9780735619937). At this time we have not yet written a review for Agile Project Management with Scrum by Ken Schwaber (ISBN-10: 073561993X, ISBN-13: 9780735619937). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Apply the principles of Scrum, one of the most popular agile programming methods, to software project managementand focus your team on delivering real business value. Author Ken Schwaber, a leader in the agile process movement and a co-creator of Scrum, brings his vast expertise to helping you guide the product and software development process more effectively and efficiently. Help eliminate the ambiguity into which so many software projects are borne, where vision and planning documents are essentially thrown over the wall to developers. This high-level reference describes how to use Scrum to manage complex technology projects in detail, combining expert insights with examples and case studies based on Scrum. Emphasizing practice over theory, this book explores every aspect of using Scrum, focusing on driving projects for maximum return on investment. Good description of Scrum, from the master | Customer Rating: | | Nobody knows Scrum better than Ken Schwaber. This is a good read for launching new Scrum projects. | A Handbook with Case Studies | Customer Rating: | There's plenty of books on SCRUM - and finding the right one is a tough job.
This book is what you're looking for if you want a basic introduction and examples of applications - because there's plenty of case studies. SCRUM techniques are described and then discussed by resort to case studies, helping the lessons become more applicable to you.
The end result is a good SCRUM Manual for a more experienced Project Manager or IT professional. It's not a book that's pick-up-and-learn basics - its a book on theory, philosophy, and applications for people who have been there.
If you need a first SCRUM book, and want to get the most out of one book as possible, this is definitely a good choice. It's also an excellent book to have to bone up on theory and real-life applications. Finally, it's a definite "lender" that you'll pass around the office. | It's a good overview of Agile, but feels a bit contrived | Customer Rating: | I generally like this book, and find it's content helpful. However, the examples chosen for the book focus on "broken" situations that seem to go beyond just project management and development methodology, and demonstrate that somehow magically, Scrum saves the day.
While I like the optimism and positive-thinking these examples encourage, it doesn't match reality. When I walk into a messy, complex situation, apply Scrum, and the world doesn't turn to pink roses, I'm left wondering if I did something wrong...I'm frustrated...I'm angry...I'm confused. The examples setup an expectation of outcomes that is too high to be reached generally, and I think some examples of failures and lessons learned would have rounded out this book much better.
In the real-world, "perfection is the enemy of success" and I think that's what I find missing from this book. All of the outcomes represent a perfect implementation of Scrum to solve the problem in the example. | Good intro to Scrum | Customer Rating: | | Great introduction to Scrum, what situations are ripe for Scrum and examples of where it has been successful - I heartly recommend. | Our new project really benefited from this book | Customer Rating: | I've been doing .NET programming for 5 and a half years now, and have practiced Agile in various degrees - all well short of what I believe Agile methodologies recommend. I have wanted to implement many more Agile methodologies, but not yet been in a manager/CTO position to ensure that these practices would be implemented.
Recently, I have been hired to do just that with a startup company. I turned to this book to help me understand the roles, meetings and project artifacts that I need to introduce to truly have an agile development environment (Scrum in particular) as our team grows.
This book really helped me to do just that, and also did it in a way that I found to be very intuitive. By relating past experiences, Ken showed me how using Scrum - in the various positions and responsibilites - moved projects forward in positive and very visible ways. I am still reading the later chapters, and still loving it. |
|