top | item 29461129 (no title) bradenb | 4 years ago What I've found while working in defense is that when your customer issues a statement of work with clear high level requirements then you're going to need waterfall (even if just at a high level). discuss order hn newest kevinmchugh|4 years ago Yeah, I think this is uncontroversial. If your problem domain generates strict, well-defined requirements, agile has less to offer.https://www.fastcompany.com/28121/they-write-right-stuffThere might still be some useful agile practices, and you could have the less defined work (eg internal tooling?) be more agile.
kevinmchugh|4 years ago Yeah, I think this is uncontroversial. If your problem domain generates strict, well-defined requirements, agile has less to offer.https://www.fastcompany.com/28121/they-write-right-stuffThere might still be some useful agile practices, and you could have the less defined work (eg internal tooling?) be more agile.
kevinmchugh|4 years ago
https://www.fastcompany.com/28121/they-write-right-stuff
There might still be some useful agile practices, and you could have the less defined work (eg internal tooling?) be more agile.