Scrum vs. Agile Methodology: What's the Difference?

Scrum vs. Agile Methodology: What's the Difference?

HomeDarcy DeCluteScrum vs. Agile Methodology: What's the Difference?
Scrum vs. Agile Methodology: What's the Difference?
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Do you want to know the difference between Agile and Scrum?

Whether you do software development, product development, or maybe even Agile project management (if that exists?), you need to understand the difference between Scrum and Agile.

By the way, here's a full article I created comparing Agile and Scrum, along with advice on how to choose between Scrum and Agile. Give it a read!

https://www.theserverside.com/tip/Agile-versus-Scrum-Whats-the-difference

Here's some AI-generated junk to capture keywords for the YouTube algo. Don't read it though. Read my article. Support people!

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AgileFramework: Agile is an overarching approach and philosophy for software development. Principles: Emphasizes iterative development, collaboration, customer feedback, and small, rapid releases. Flexibility: Agile is a flexible approach that can be adapted to different methodologies and practices. Values: Guided by the Agile Manifesto, which includes values and principles that prioritize individuals and interactions, working software, customer collaboration, and responding to change. Documentation: Prefers lightweight, working documentation that evolves as needed. Scope: Can be applied to different types of projects and teams beyond software development. Methodologies: Includes various methodologies such as Scrum, Kanban, Lean, Extreme Programming (XP) and others. ScrumFramework: Scrum is a specific methodology within the Agile framework. Roles: Defines specific roles such as Product Owner, Scrum Master, and Development Team. Events: Concerns specific events (ceremonies) such as Sprint Planning, Daily Stand-up (Daily Scrum), Sprint Review and Sprint Retrospective. Artifacts: Uses specific artifacts such as Product Backlog, Sprint Backlog, and Increment. Iterations: The work is divided into fixed-length iterations called Sprints, which typically last two to four weeks. Process: Follows a structured process with clearly defined roles, events and artifacts. Focus: Primarily focused on improving teamwork, accountability, and iterative progress toward a well-defined goal. Prescriptive: Provides a more prescriptive framework compared to Agile, with detailed guidelines for processes and practices. In summary, Agile is a broad philosophy for iterative development and adaptability, while Scrum is a specific, structured methodology within the Agile framework, with detailed processes and roles for project management and development.

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