Agile Glossary

Sustainable Pace

What is Sustainable Pace?

The team aims for a work pace that they would be able to sustain indefinitely.

This entails a firm refusal of what is often considered a “necessary evil” in the software industry – long work hours, overtime, or even working nights or weekends. As such this “practice” is really more of a contract negotiated between the team and their management.

Also Known As

The term “sustainable pace”, more general, was proposed by Kent Beck himself in replacement of the original “40-hour week” denomination for this Extreme Programming practice.

Expected Benefits

The Agile mindset views recourse to overtime, other than on an exceptional basis, as detrimental to productivity rather than enhancing it. Overtime tends to mask schedule, management, or quality deficiencies; the Agile approach favors exposing these deficiencies as early as possible and remedying their underlying causes, rather than merely treating the symptoms.

Academic Publications

There is a consensus that research in manufacturing industries generally shows that overtime has a detrimental impact on productivity.

Some caveats apply when transposing this to software development; one review considers the research in this area inconclusive; even defining the term “productivity” is problematic in the context of knowledge work; few studies appear to have been conducted that apply specifically to overtime among knowledge workers.

Several articles and industry presentations have made a strong case against overtime in the software development context, and provide further references to published academic research.

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Additional Agile Glossary Terms

The team meets regularly to reflect on the most significant events that occurred since the previous such meeting, and identify opportunities for improvement.
An Agile team frequently releases its product into the hands of end users, listening to feedback, whether critical or appreciative.
A timebox is a previously agreed period of time during which a person or a team works steadily towards completion of some goal.
Continuous deployment aims to reduce the time elapsed between writing a line of code and making that code available to users in production. To achieve continuous deployment, the team relies on infrastructure that automates and instruments the various steps leading up to deployment, so that after each integration successfully meeting these release criteria, the live application is updated with new code.
In an Agile context, Incremental Development is when each successive version of a product is usable, and each builds upon the previous version by adding user-visible functionality.

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