They say knowing the requirements before you start loads to a higher chance of success. Agile projects are more likely to fail because you’re more likely to use Agile when you don’t have a clear map of the requirements and want to be able to pivot quickly. Working as intended I would think.
All that is assuming your shop actually knows what Agile means and isn’t just doing Waterfall with stand-ups.
They say knowing the requirements before you start loads to a higher chance of success. Agile projects are more likely to fail because you’re more likely to use Agile when you don’t have a clear map of the requirements and want to be able to pivot quickly. Working as intended I would think.
All that is assuming your shop actually knows what Agile means and isn’t just doing Waterfall with stand-ups.
Yeah they seem to be implying that the “opposite” of agile is getting a good set of requirements, which is… optimistic.