Agile practices in nonprofit contexts
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* No one way to define agile
* Minimizing documentation * Minimizing overhead * Trusting people over process * Scrum
* Defacto standard for Agile in the corporate world * Comes from Rugby! * How are Scrum and Agile different?
* Scrum defines a few things you have to have in an iteration
* Two weeks to a month * User stories in a backlog * Defined roles
* Bus. owner * Scrum master * Team * Bus. owner defines priorities
* Team decides on what they can do in a sprint
* Daily standup
* What am I working on today? * What did I do yesterday? * What is blocking my progress? * Post-sprint meeting (process meeting)
* What worked, what didn't? * Extreme Programming
* Very much about what developers did
* Pair programming
* Not as common anymore because nobody wants to pay 2 devs for one person's work * Kanban
* Kanban removes iterations completely * Pull jobs from a board and ship * "Flow" instead of iterations * Sets limits on:
* Items in progress * Items in backlog * Items done but not shipped * Existing nonprofit processes:
* Midwest Academy Model
* Charts
* Allies * Adversaries * Constituents * Tactics * Resources * Criticism
* Doesn't move the project forward * Good at planning, bad at execution * Not good at chunking plan into action items * User stories for nonprofits:
* Used in software: X user can do y action for z business need * In nonprofits: X type of constituent can do y action for z social benefit * Case studies about Agile in nonprofits:
* Assigning value outside of difficulty is useful * Make ranking of priorities visible * There's usually some kind of visualization (board, spreadsheet, whatever) to prioritize user stories * Most useful when you're building something, esp. if you're foundation-funded because it's similar to getting investment capital * But Agile doesn't work when something breaks * Case study: Building software to help refugee orgs in Africa
* Tried to do user stories, but emergencies come up to disrupt them * "We need to get to where this group of constituents understand online anonymity enough to safely use a tool." * "We need to get to where this SMS based tool is stable enough that our operator partners will implement it." * You have a pool of resources and assign order of importance
* "The order of importance is mightier than the makeup of your team" * People do whatever needs to be done most rather than exactly what they're best at * "Not my job" thinking reduced * Case study: using Scrum for public access TV station
* Project is so huge theres 150 user stories
* All interact with each other, hard to separate * Really focused on individual testing * Not doing good regression/"big picture" testing * Prioritization doesn't work as well at scale, possibly? * Hard to see things "holistically" using Agile * Response: need to learn to write better user stories to avoid this! * Case study: Corporate-world scrum
* "Epics", stories, and technical tests * Also "themes" for big picture thinking * "Nonprofit strategic planning is totally waterfall" * * Agile methodology lets us check in occasionally instead of maybe once a year * "Incredibly frustrating to have the basic toolkit be 'what are we going to do for three years?'" * Process facilitated by funders * How can we structure grants so funders are more like clients? * Scrum defines what happens when you break the process
* Built to handle interruptions * You visualize that the cost is high * There is a very real cost of immediate changes, communicating that is important * Rigidity of foundations is causing nonprofit stagnation, how do we fix it?
* Software development methodologies move fast, foundations move really slow * How do we build bridges to foundations to get them to use more efficient methods?
* Using a "name brand" methodology can get you buy-in * Agile is really good about short-term reporting * We can tell you a month into the project what can get done in six months:
* The other side is estimation of tasks * You never estimate in hours or days, instead you give story points * Define difficulty and time required relative to other things only * Then measure velocity (number of story points in an iteration) * Very big tasks are less accurately estimated * Velocity takes into account that estimation is hard * Software projects within nonprofits are a good opportunity to drive adoption of agile practices in other projects within nonprofits (like fundraising and grant writing)
* Who's a good funder (short cycles, support agile methods)?
* Post dot-com boom foundations
* Hewlitt Foundation
* Only institutions * Only general support * Only three-year money * Omidyar network
* Define a solution, fund organizations regardless of tax status
* Knight Foundation
* Shorter grant cycle * Their interest in tech projects and their funding makes them see that agile practices are valuable * Awesome Foundation * Global Integrity Innovation Fund
* Working prototypes of gov transparency tools * Up to 10k * RFP culture reproduces itself!
* How can the "dam break"?
* New session proposal: Create non-profit user stories!