The Agile manifesto focuses on the delivery of valuable software. In Lean, the principles emphasise value, where every activity that does not add value is seen as waste. Despite the strong focus on value, and that the primary critical success factor for software intensive product development lies in the value domain, no empirical study has investigated specifically what value is. This paper presents an empirical study that investigates how value is interpreted and prioritised, and how value is assured and measured. Data was collected through semi-structured interviews with 23 participants from 14 agile software development organisations. The contribution of this study is fourfold. First, it examines how value is perceived amongst agile software development organisations. Second, it compares the perceptions and priorities of the perceived values by domains and roles. Third, it includes an examination of what practices are used to achieve value in industry, and what hinders the achievement of value. Fourth, it characterises what measurements are used to assure, and evaluate value-creation activities.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Alahyari_2017
%A Alahyari, Hiva
%A Svensson, Richard Berntsson
%A Gorschek, Tony
%D 2017
%I Elsevier BV
%J Journal of Systems and Software
%K engineering.management orchestration
%P 271-288
%R 10.1016/j.jss.2016.12.007
%T A study of value in agile software development organizations
%U https://doi.org/10.1016%2Fj.jss.2016.12.007
%V 125
%X The Agile manifesto focuses on the delivery of valuable software. In Lean, the principles emphasise value, where every activity that does not add value is seen as waste. Despite the strong focus on value, and that the primary critical success factor for software intensive product development lies in the value domain, no empirical study has investigated specifically what value is. This paper presents an empirical study that investigates how value is interpreted and prioritised, and how value is assured and measured. Data was collected through semi-structured interviews with 23 participants from 14 agile software development organisations. The contribution of this study is fourfold. First, it examines how value is perceived amongst agile software development organisations. Second, it compares the perceptions and priorities of the perceived values by domains and roles. Third, it includes an examination of what practices are used to achieve value in industry, and what hinders the achievement of value. Fourth, it characterises what measurements are used to assure, and evaluate value-creation activities.
@article{Alahyari_2017,
abstract = {The Agile manifesto focuses on the delivery of valuable software. In Lean, the principles emphasise value, where every activity that does not add value is seen as waste. Despite the strong focus on value, and that the primary critical success factor for software intensive product development lies in the value domain, no empirical study has investigated specifically what value is. This paper presents an empirical study that investigates how value is interpreted and prioritised, and how value is assured and measured. Data was collected through semi-structured interviews with 23 participants from 14 agile software development organisations. The contribution of this study is fourfold. First, it examines how value is perceived amongst agile software development organisations. Second, it compares the perceptions and priorities of the perceived values by domains and roles. Third, it includes an examination of what practices are used to achieve value in industry, and what hinders the achievement of value. Fourth, it characterises what measurements are used to assure, and evaluate value-creation activities. },
added-at = {2017-09-29T17:51:52.000+0200},
author = {Alahyari, Hiva and Svensson, Richard Berntsson and Gorschek, Tony},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/215c626c46a767339ec066c722f2c01a0/ispma},
doi = {10.1016/j.jss.2016.12.007},
interhash = {88a5b19bca2ebb90769822e931c45930},
intrahash = {15c626c46a767339ec066c722f2c01a0},
journal = {Journal of Systems and Software},
keywords = {engineering.management orchestration},
month = mar,
pages = {271-288},
publisher = {Elsevier {BV}},
timestamp = {2018-02-06T16:51:33.000+0100},
title = {A study of value in agile software development organizations},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016%2Fj.jss.2016.12.007},
volume = 125,
year = 2017
}