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How Do Globally Distributed Agile Teams Self-organise? - Initial Insights from a Case Study

Topics: "3A" (Agile, Aspect-oriented and Agent-oriented) Software Engineering; "3A" (Agile, Aspect-oriented and Agent-oriented) Software Engineering; Geographically Distributed Software Development Environments; Software and Systems Development Methodologies; Software Process Improvement

Authors: Sherlock A. Licorish and Stephen G. MacDonell

Affiliation: Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand

Keyword(s): Software Development, Psycholinguistics, Jazz, Self-organising Roles, Attitudes and Competencies.

Related Ontology Subjects/Areas/Topics: Agile Methodologies ; Cross-Feeding between Data and Software Engineering ; Geographically Distributed Software Development Environments ; Service-Oriented Software Engineering and Management ; Software and Systems Development Methodologies ; Software Engineering ; Software Process Improvement ; Software Project Management

Abstract: Agile software developers are required to self-organize, occupying various informal roles as needed in order to successfully deliver software features. However, previous research has reported conflicting evidence about the way teams actually undertake this activity. The ability to self-organize is particularly necessary for software development in globally distributed environments, where distance has been shown to exacerbate human-centric issues. Understanding the way successful teams self-organise should inform distributed team composition strategies and software project governance. We have used psycholinguistics to study the way IBM Rational Jazz practitioners enacted various roles, expressed attitudes and shared competencies to successfully self-organize in their global projects. Among our findings, we uncovered that practitioners enacted various roles depending on their teams’ cohort of features; and that team leaders were most critical to IBM Jazz teams’ self-organisation. We di scuss these findings and highlight their implications for software project governance. (More)

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Paper citation in several formats:
Licorish, S. and MacDonell, S. (2013). How Do Globally Distributed Agile Teams Self-organise? - Initial Insights from a Case Study. In Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Evaluation of Novel Approaches to Software Engineering - ENASE; ISBN 978-989-8565-62-4; ISSN 2184-4895, SciTePress, pages 157-164. DOI: 10.5220/0004437001570164

@conference{enase13,
author={Sherlock A. Licorish. and Stephen G. MacDonell.},
title={How Do Globally Distributed Agile Teams Self-organise? - Initial Insights from a Case Study},
booktitle={Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Evaluation of Novel Approaches to Software Engineering - ENASE},
year={2013},
pages={157-164},
publisher={SciTePress},
organization={INSTICC},
doi={10.5220/0004437001570164},
isbn={978-989-8565-62-4},
issn={2184-4895},
}

TY - CONF

JO - Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Evaluation of Novel Approaches to Software Engineering - ENASE
TI - How Do Globally Distributed Agile Teams Self-organise? - Initial Insights from a Case Study
SN - 978-989-8565-62-4
IS - 2184-4895
AU - Licorish, S.
AU - MacDonell, S.
PY - 2013
SP - 157
EP - 164
DO - 10.5220/0004437001570164
PB - SciTePress