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The HCQIS LACE is the BEST place to discover the different forms of Agile practiced around the world, re-familiarize yourself with concepts and practices that you've already heard about, and gain practical training and work products to help you and your team implement Agile in your day-to-day operations!  

What is Agile?

Agile is an iterative approach to project management and software development that helps teams deliver value to their customers faster and with fewer headaches. Instead of betting everything on a "big bang" launch, an agile team delivers work in small, but consumable, increments. Requirements, plans, and results are evaluated continuously so teams have a natural mechanism for responding to change quickly.

Whereas the traditional "waterfall" approach has one discipline contribute to the project, then "throw it over the wall" to the next contributor, agile calls for collaborative cross-functional teams. Open communication, collaboration, adaptation, and trust amongst team members are at the heart of agile. Although the project lead or product owner typically prioritizes the work to be delivered, the team takes the lead on deciding how the work will get done, self-organizing around granular tasks and assignments.

Agile isn't defined by a set of ceremonies or specific development techniques. Rather, agile is a group of methodologies that demonstrate a commitment to tight feedback cycles and continuous improvement.


Communities of Practice

Communities of PracticeAs HCQIS's Agile practitioners begin to discover, define, and refine practices that work best for them, Communities of Practice (CoPs) will be stood up to share information with the community.  From this section you will be able to find information on HCQIS Agile CoPs and their work!


Recommended Links

Recommended LinksA consolidated listing of external resources that provide information on the different varieties of agile that are practiced and theories on scaling Agile.


Resources and Tools

Resources & ToolsResources and tools, such as reference materials and templates, for ADOs and other team members to adopt and implement Agile practices.

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