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What Is Acceptance Test-Driven Development? We help define the concept of acceptance test-driven development with the help of an interview between Ken Pugh and Ade Shokoya. As we raise the level of collaboration and shift the relationship between testers and developers, we realize the potential for faster, better products. |
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The Product Canvas: A Complementary View The product canvas, when used with a business model canvas, provides similar benefits to the product owner that the business model canvas provides to the product manager. Scott Sehlhorst examines the product canvas and the business model canvas and how the two tools can be used together. |
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Seven Tips for Virtual Requirements Meetings Increasingly, projects teams are dispersed and may be working not only in different cities but potentially in different countries, continents, and time zones. Adrian Reed offers seven tips to help overcome challenges when facilitating virtual requirements elicitation sessions for a dispersed team. |
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Eight Flubs and Flaws to Avoid When Presenting a Web Seminar So many web seminars, so little time. Yet as relevant and high content as many web seminars are, some are more professionally presented than others. If you present web seminars, or hope to some day, here are eight annoying flubs and flaws—and how to avoid them. |
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Project Lessons from the Great Train Robbery Successful repetition of any business activity can lead to a false sense of security. We often assume that just because something has worked in the past, it will always work in the future. Adrian Reed looks at what we can learn from the Great Train Robbery and how selective perception affects us. |
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Why Business Analysts Don't Elicit Requirements Business analysts don’t gather requirements, but they don’t elicit requirements either. Business analysts have conversations with stakeholders to understand their needs and wants, and that information leads them in the direction of identifying the requirements. |
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Majority of Election-Related Tweets Are Likely to Go Unseen As the 2012 presidential election comes to a close, the use of Twitter and other social media platforms by casual observers—and even the candidates themselves—is at all time high. Will usage be so high that the platforms will be relatively useless due to information overload? |
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The Great PM and BA Debate The discussion of the relationship between the project manager (PM) and the business analyst (BA) is quite common, and some see a natural career path from senior BA to PM. The BA and PM roles are complementary—and there may be similar shared competencies—but there is a very different focus. |