Proof Agile Work

There are many stories that capture why and how Agile works. One of the most compelling is the P-80 Shooting Star, the first jet fighter, developed by Lockheed Martin’s Skunkworks team:

  • P-80 Shooting Star was the first Jet Fighter
  • Developed in 1943 for use in WWII
  • Led by Kelly Johnson using a colocated team in a tent
  • Completed in 143 days

This is unheard of speed in innovation and delivery. Today similar innovation would take many years, if not a decade. Kelly Johnson did this, using principles that align closely with Agile:

  • Small, Strong, Self-Directed, and Cross-Functional Teams
  • Owners and Vendors had to collaborate and trust each other
  • Managed and responded to change; any team could update the designs
  • Minimize reports, but record what was important
  • Incremental development by teams that could test their own work

This matches the core tenants of Agile closely:

  • Shared Vision, but no fixed scope (they never built it before!)
  • Whole teams (customer, builders, testers)
  • Incremental delivery (as stated, they had to identify and solve problems one at a time)
  • Continuous integration and testing (teams test increments early and often)

Example 2: Navy Energy Return on Investment

  • Goal: select projects to reduce energy costs and use of “brown power”
  • Process: evaluate and select the best projects delivering the highest “bang for the buck”
  • Project: build a decision support tool quickly to enable support for selection

The scope of this project was to build decisions support systems for projects to identify and select $500M in energy investments.  This project was executed iteratively over four years for about five million dollars. The team makeup included:

  • 2 cross-functional teams
  • 8 contract personnel from Booz Allen Hamilton (BAH)
  • 5 customer personnel from the Navy

Outcomes included a fifty dollars per dollar return on investment (ROI: 50). That means the Navy gained $50M per year because of this project and its decisions support systems it developed. This was achieved through iteratively identifying and building the scope needed in multiple releases:

  • $20M were gained per year in savings, by building a quality management tool for projects
  • $30M were gained per year in benefits, by building systems to better select projects
  • Sustainability was improved by modeling where the next best projects would be with 95% accuracy
  • This enabled BAH to win $10M per year in new contracts at the Navy for renewable energy management

Large Scale Agile Examples:

  • Condor Cluster – result of large amounts of reuse and modular architectures (Agile Engineering Example)
    • One of the most powerful supercomputers
    • Strung 2 million miles of cable to connect PlayStation 3 gaming consoles (PS3s)
    • Modular enough to be loaded into a spy plane to process images in-flight
    • Reduced aerial imagery processing from days to seconds
  • NASA’s Faster Better Cheaper Initiative – reduced scope and size of spacecraft (Lean/Agile Release Designs)
    • Major initiative in the 1990s
    • Costs were one-tenth the current cost of producing spacecraft
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