Design Principles
Fundamental guidelines that inform and shape the design process, ensuring consistency, usability, and effectiveness in product creation.
Fundamental guidelines that inform and shape the design process, ensuring consistency, usability, and effectiveness in product creation.
Portfolio Management is the process of overseeing and coordinating an organization's collection of products to achieve strategic objectives.
Program Increment (PI) Planning is a cadence-based event that serves as the heartbeat of the Agile Release Train, aligning teams on goals and priorities for the next increment.
A strategic framework used to analyze the external macro-environmental factors affecting an organization: Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Environmental, and Legal.
Agile Release Train (ART) is a long-lived team of Agile teams that, along with other stakeholders, incrementally develops, delivers, and operates one or more solutions in a value stream.
Application Lifecycle Management (ALM) is the process of managing an application's development, maintenance, and eventual retirement throughout its lifecycle.
The four key elements of marketing: Product, Price, Place, and Promotion, used to develop marketing strategies.
The level of sophistication and integration of design practices within an organization's processes and culture.
Product-Oriented Delivery (POD) is a methodology that focuses on organizing teams around products rather than projects.