Learn How You can Use Inflectra's Products for Scrum, Waterfall & Scaled Agile Projects
Unlike many companies that have built tools around a single methodology, Inflectra recognizes that your needs are unique and that our tools need to be flexible and adaptable enough to support a variety of different methodologies. The information below provides a background on each methodology and how you can use our products to deliver on-time and on-budget every time.
The manifesto for agile software development has revolutionized the way companies plan, develop, test and release software. Throwing away years of accumulated orthodoxy, agile development methods have now become the accepted way to develop software.
Agile scrum methodology is a project management system that relies on incremental development. It’s one of the most popular and widely-used frameworks in agile development, and with good reason. It offers a wide range of benefits with several common variations that can adapt to different project and organization needs.
One of the simplest agile methodology frameworks, Kanban has been around for almost a century. Keep reading to learn how it works, why it’s so popular, and how you can enhance your Kanban workflows today.
eXtreme Programming (XP) is an iterative agile methodology based on highly disciplined software engineering practices such as pair programming.
While Agile methodologies have become the gold standard in recent years, the more traditional Waterfall model remains relevant for many projects, standing as a testament to structured, sequential development processes. Understanding Waterfall’s structure, practical applications, and where it fits within today’s development landscape is key for software developers and project managers alike.
Based on the project management processes used in other industries, the traditional Waterfall approach to software development follows a sequential set of steps from requirements to release. Organizations that can’t use pure Agile methodologies have adapted Agile ideas for use in Waterfall projects, creating new Hybrid methodologies.
Because one of the limitations of standard agile methodologies is that they are designed to primarily operate at a team level, the scaled agile framework has seen a recent boom in popularity. It uses several core values and principles to align cross-functional teams throughout a large organization, making it more appealing to larger organizations. However, it does this without losing the key benefits of agile methodologies such as speed and focus on customer feedback.
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