Your browser does not support JavaScript!
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • RSS

Update 2018: Download the original Agile 2008 Money for Nothing presentation (updated)

The Money for Nothing and Your Change for Free strategy has been widely deployed as the basis of most agile contracts. See the Money for Nothing and Change for Free patterns at ScrumPlop.org. Scrum was designed for hyperproductive teams. If you can run at 5-10x your competitors velocity and quality you should generate 5-10x more revenue. Why do so few great Agile teams do this? Their business model sucks!

You got to watch how they do it on MTV. Otherwise you will be pushing refrigerators for the rest of your life. Money for Nothing and Your Change for Free was the theme of my presentation at Agile 2008. The right method of Agile contracting can double, triple, or quadruple your margins. Get rid of hourly billing. It just keeps you on the treadmill!

Gerry Kirk has a good writeup of my Agile 2008 presentation on his blog. Money For Nothing: Deliver More Value For Your Client (And You) Written by gerrykirk on August 19, 2008 – 3:19 pm: These are notes from Jeff Sutherland’s Agile 2008 presentation “Money For Nothing and Your Change For Free: Agile Contracts“.

Jeff summarized his talk in this way: “The “Money for Nothing” strategy works when customers want fixed price estimates for the entire contract up front. The Agile contract allows termination of the contract early when the value of features drops below an ROI criteria. The contract allows the customer to save 80% of their remaining funds by giving the Agile vendor 20% of the remaining contract value in return driving the margins of an Agile contractor from 15-20% up to 50-80%.” From Scrum Butt to High Performing Team Jeff began his presentation by talking about the Nokia Test For Scrum Certification, which Nokia uses to measure their team’s level of agility (see questions and scoring method in slide show below). Jeff had everyone in the room score their own team. I rated people in general at a 5 out of 10, which is just above the starting average. Anything 8 and under is in the ScrumButt category. Why is this important? Teams that score high tend to be the high performing teams. They also generate much higher revenues, based on Jeff’s analysis: * Great Scrum: 400% revenue increase * Good Scrum: 300% * Pretty good Scrum: 150% - 200% * ScrumButt: 0 - 35%

Jeff also compared agile to waterfall teams, suggesting high performing agile teams can outperform waterfall teams by a 5-6x margin. The problem is, contracts that are time and materials don’t reward high performance. T&M is low risk and low margin, you only get paid for the hours you put in, even when you take far less time than your competitors. Fixed price contracts aren’t any better, with vendors trying to out-discount each other. Many vendors only making money if the project is late and over budget due to change requests and building functionality that users do not want.

en_USEnglish
Shares