It’s clear, there is not a one-size-fits-all way to define Agile success. Every organization is different, every Agile team is different, and every software development project is different. Each organization has to figure out how to pilot, extend and excel at Agile. Distinct Agile teams within the organization also have to determine how to move to performance in their own ways and make the most effective use of team members to meet their commitments. Full participation from everyone involved is critical to move the organization, process and infrastructure to a better place. The successful approach to adopting Agile acknowledges Agile is not just fad or a quick fix, it is part of an ongoing dialogue of what’s working, what’s not and what are we going to change.

Bringing the Agile community together is a great way for both new and mature Agile teams to share best practices, pain points and success stories. Rally hosts regional events, called Agile Success Tours, to bring the Agile community together for just this purpose. At a recent event in Dallas, we asked participants how they defined Agile success and posed the same question to Twitter. We caught some great answers on video and got some nice, succinct tweets defining Agile success:

Twitter thread Dallas AST


These answers illuminate that Agile is a different way of thinking and working for organizations. It’s a smarter, more skeptical and fun craft that addresses the systemic issues found in our increasingly complex and interconnected world. Through Rally’s work over the years helping organizations both large and small adopt Agile, we’ve come to figure out some fundamental components of what success looks like. Agile success comes down to creating the yearning to continue to ratchet up your agility and discipline as a team.

There truly is a simplicity behind Agile adoption when you create the shared commitment and vision that drives your organization – then you begin to see the beauty and the possibilities attainable in an Agile business.

Ryan Martens is a skier,  founding board member of the Entrepreneurs Foundation of Colorado, and CTO at Rally Software.