WoW!!!
I'm astonished by the responses, most of them were what I was already expecting as they aren't new.
The biggest misunderstanding about scrum and agile in general is, its only suitable for software industry. Some would even argue and claim that it even failed on IT projects as well
Anyways, without pointing fingers - like it or not, Agile, Scrum, Lean and a lot of other agile frameworks are already in use in many different industries and getting more and more popular each passing day. More and more companies are joining the band wagon after looking at the success of being agile.
Who said Scrum cannot be used on Hardware? Watch:
View attachment 678966
Exactly, scrum is widely being used in Manufacturing and has already been proven as a major success. There is even an agile framework designed specifically for Manufacturing and its called eXtreme Manufacturing (XM):
en.wikipedia.org
Furthermore, LEAN was kind of developed by Toyota motors in mid 1900s and they were able to remove waste from their manufacturing and were able to increase their production capacity many folds. And scrum actually covers most of lean concepts:
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Read how Toyota revolutionized large scale manufacturing by using agile practices:
Amazon.com: The Toyota Way: 14 Management Principles from the World's Greatest Manufacturer: 8601404279935: Liker, Jeffrey: Books
www.amazon.com
Again, what is the evidence that agile can't be used on Engineering projects?
Is Agile applicable in industrial engineering? If so, how does it work? Find an answer to these and more questions in our guide to Agile engineering.
kanbanize.com
How do you plan for the unknowns in waterfall? Also it is not about how many difficult areas are there in an engineering project but rather about how and where you can do things in an agile way. Scrum helps in planning and execution and it can be implemented anywhere when planning and execution is going to happen. Whether in design, validation, integration, regression / stress esting etc. etc.
Yes, it does.
Completely wrong info sir. F-35 was done using everyone's favorite....
WATERFALL Approach!!!
The F-35 Is Worse Than HealthCare.gov Vocative.com - Eric Markowitz, 25 Mar 2014 The $400 billion jet project is the most expensive weapon the Pentagon
www.scruminc.com
Excerpt:
Dated:
Mar 2014
The $400 billion jet (F-35) project is the most expensive weapon the Pentagon has ever purchased. It's also seven years behind schedule and $163 billion over budget ...
And here’s the kicker: According to a
41-page Government Accountability Office (GAO) report released yesterday, the F-35, which has yet to fly a single official mission, will stay grounded for at least another 13 months because of “problems completing software testing.”
F-35 was done using Traditional Waterfall, not agile and turned out to be the biggest fighter avaition disaster as a project.
Saab Grippen on the other hand was done using Agile / Scrum and feast your eyes:
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Who said we do projects in agile without requirements?
Sorry, but your post has too much misinformation and incorrect stuff that I almost don't want to answer this. People hate agile or scrum mostly due to their lack of knowledge about it or they just don't want to change the way they are working. People are generally resistant to change and are afraid of changing their day to day work style or be more honest, open and transparent (as per agile practices) about their work.
There is no concept of
slave labor in agile.
This shows your lack of knowledge to be honest. Agile actually empowers the team and make them self organized. Its the waterfall or traditional approach where employees are forced to work late or given tight deadlines. In agile, the team decides the time they want to do the task, they even decide which task to be prioritized or rescheduled.
Anyways, I can't help you more. You need to read more about what Agile / Scrum really is, then we can talk if you want.
What is the proof that agile only works for software and is prone to high failure rate, high cost of failure etc. It doesn't matter whether you have 20+ years of experience or 50+ years of experience. What really matters is whether you were doing it right or not.
If you failed to do it right, or if you just hate it - that doesn't mean that the approach or framework is wrong. Not to brag about something but I have already helped 3 large organizations (multinational) - and they have improved in many areas multiple folds. Similarly, you can do some google and see what is happening around the globe with agile transformations.
Agile is not fix to every problem and its not pure magic. So it will not fix the problems from day one. That is why we call is agile transformation journey which takes months if not years to train people, change their mindset, change organizational culture and make agile practices as habit - only then you start to see the benefits. People expect the things to magically change the moment the utter the magic word agile from their mouth. It doesn't happen like that.
Other times, they just claim or think that they are doing things in agile ways but in reality they are not so when they fail (which they were destined to anyways), they jump on guns and start blaming agile. I hope you are not one of those people.