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19th Australian Conference on Software Engineering (aswec 2008)
Understanding Self-Organizing Teams in Agile Software Development
March 26-March 28
ISBN: 978-0-7695-3100-7
Traditional software teams consist of independently focused self-managing professionals with high individual but low team autonomy. A challenge with introducing agile software development is that it requires a high level of both individual and team autonomy. This paper studies the barriers with introducing self-organizing teams in agile software development and presents data from a seven month ethnographic study of professional developers in a Scrum team. We found the most important barrier to be the highly specialized skills of the developers and the corresponding division of work. In addition we found a lack of system for team support, and reduced external autonomy to be important barriers for introducing self-organizing teams. These findings have implications for software development managers and practitioners.
Index Terms:
Scrum, self-organizing teams, team autonomy, agile software development, ethnographic, single-case
Citation:
Nils Brede Moe, Torgeir Dings?, Tore Dyb?, "Understanding Self-Organizing Teams in Agile Software Development," aswec, pp.76-85, 19th Australian Conference on Software Engineering (aswec 2008), 2008
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