DocumentCode :
11907
Title :
Self-Organizing Roles on Agile Software Development Teams
Author :
Hoda, Rashina ; Noble, James ; Marshall, Simon
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand
Volume :
39
Issue :
3
fYear :
2013
fDate :
Mar-13
Firstpage :
422
Lastpage :
444
Abstract :
Self-organizing teams have been recognized and studied in various forms-as autonomous groups in socio-technical systems, enablers of organizational theories, agents of knowledge management, and as examples of complex-adaptive systems. Over the last decade, self-organizing teams have taken center stage in software engineering when they were incorporated as a hallmark of Agile methods. Despite the long and rich history of self-organizing teams and their recent popularity with Agile methods, there has been little research on the topic within software wngineering. Particularly, there is a dearth of research on how Agile teams organize themselves in practice. Through a Grounded Theory research involving 58 Agile practitioners from 23 software organizations in New Zealand and India over a period of four years, we identified informal, implicit, transient, and spontaneous roles that make Agile teams self-organizing. These roles-Mentor, Coordinator, Translator, Champion, Promoter, and Terminator-are focused toward providing initial guidance and encouraging continued adherence to Agile methods, effectively managing customer expectations and coordinating customer collaboration, securing and sustaining senior management support, and identifying and removing team members threatening the self-organizing ability of the team. Understanding these roles will help software development teams and their managers better comprehend and execute their roles and responsibilities as a self-organizing team.
Keywords :
knowledge management; software management; software prototyping; team working; India; New Zealand; agile software development teams; autonomous groups; champion role; complex-adaptive system examples; coordinator role; customer collaboration coordination; customer expectation management; grounded theory research; knowledge management agents; mentor role; organizational theories enablers; promoter role; self-organizing roles; self-organizing teams; senior management support security; senior management support sustainability; socio-technical systems; software engineering; terminator role; translator role; Collaboration; Organizations; Organizing; Programming; Software; Software engineering; Agile software development; Self-organizing; grounded theory; software engineering; team roles;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Software Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0098-5589
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TSE.2012.30
Filename :
6197202
Link To Document :
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