Agile Project Management Workshop
Boost Efficiency and Deliver Projects More Quickly with Agile Project Management!
Learn the Agile approach in our two-day workshop and reap the benefits for you and your organization.
UTC is excited to announce that we are now offering payment plans for this course! Visit our financial aid page to learn more.
Agile project management is a flexible and collaborative way to develop projects. The method allows for continuous adaptation and customer feedback, leading to quicker turnaround times on projects without sacrificing quality. During the workshop, learn core agile principles and how to apply them to your projects.
Agile is a great approach for projects where:
- Needs may change during the project
- Early and frequent customer feedback is important
- Efficiency and quick results are a priority
Workshop at Glance
Workshop Format
Live-Online
Length
Two-Day Workshop
Meeting Days and Times
November 5 & 6, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. EST
Contact Hours
16
CEUs
1.6
PDUs
The workshop qualifies for 16 PDUs to apply toward maintaining various Project Management Institute (PMI) certifications. Learn more about certification maintenance on PMI's website.
Cost
$899 Standard Registration Fee
CPE is now offering payment plans for this course! Additionally, we offer Sallie Mae loans and employer payment options. Learn more financial aid options here →.
Do You Still Have Questions?
Schedule a call with or email our project management program coordinator, Rebecca Hurst.
What is Agile Project Management?
Agile project management delivers projects in smaller, frequent pieces. The approach emphasizes iterative development, collaboration and customer feedback. Breaking down projects into smaller increments enables teams to adapt and respond to changes more effectively, which creates a more responsive and customer-centric development process. Continuous releases present opportunities for regular stakeholder feedback, leading to quicker adjustments that result in a more desirable end product.
Agile is based on the Agile Manifesto, which considers items on the left more important than items on the right.
- Individuals and interactions over processes and tools
- Working software over comprehensive documentation
- Customer collaboration over contract negotiation
- Responding to change over following a plan
Who Should Attend the Workshop?
There are no prerequisites to attending the workshop other than an open mind.
Job titles that may benefit from learning the Agile method include, but are not limited to:
- Project Managers
- Scrum Master
- Product Owners
- Product Developers
- Software Developers/Engineers
- Quality Assurance Engineers
- Business Analysts
- Marketing Managers
- Program Managers
- Customer Success Managers
- IT Managers
- Any role that involves working on projects
Additionally, anyone sitting for the PMP exam is encouraged to participate in the workshop as the exam is 50% agile.
How Workshop Participants Benefit
Agile transforms your work experience, as individuals:
- Gain a Stronger Sense of Project Ownership
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Agile breaks down projects into smaller, manageable segments called “sprints.” Sprints provide a clear understanding of how individual contributions fit into the larger project picture.
- Enhance Communication and Collaboration Skills
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Agile emphasizes teamwork and frequent communication. Daily stand-up meetings and regular feedback loops ensure teammates are aligned and create a collaborative work environment.
- Expand Your Project Management Skillset
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Learn impactful tools such as Kanban boards product backlogs, sprints, burndown/burnup charts, user stories and sprint retrospectives to increase efficiency.
- Become a Well-Rounded Professional
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Besides project management, communication and collaboration skills, Agile improves problem-solving and adaptability that employers value.
- Embrace Diversity
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Agile thrives on different perspectives. Learn how to effectively collaborate and leverage the strengths of a diverse team.
How Organizations Benefit
As organizations implement Agile project management, they reap benefits such as:
- Shortened Product Development Lifecycles
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Agile breaks down projects into smaller, manageable segments called “sprints.” Sprints accelerate iteration and new feature delivery, putting a usable product in your customers’ hands more quickly.
- Improved Product Delivery With Less Technical Debt
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Agile focuses on continuous integration and testing throughout development. This helps catch and fix bugs early on, reducing technical debt (design flaws or coding problems that accumulate over time) and ensuring a higher-quality end product.
- Improved Teamwork
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Agile emphasizes self-organizing and cross-functional teams that work collaboratively toward common goals. This creates a positive work environment of ownership, trust and camaraderie that boosts morale, productivity and project success.
- Increased Customer Satisfaction
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By closely collaborating with customers, agile teams ensure they build what the customer truly values and reduces the risk of delivering off-target products.
- Enhanced Risk Management
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Agile promotes early and frequent feedback loops that allow teams to identify potential risks and issues sooner rather than later. Continuous process review creates proactive, rather than reactive, risk mitigation for smoother project execution.
What You Will Learn: Topics Covered
- The Agile approach and its benefits
- The right way to apply project management principles to an Agile project
- How to avoid pitfalls and set your team up for success
- How to create a self-directed team
- The right way to approach documentation on an Agile project
- How to maximize Agile project management's benefits and minimize risks
- Agile’s value of decreasing product defects
- How agile improves team productivity, delivery of business value and project success
How Does Agile Differ From the Traditional Waterfall Method?
- Structure
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Agile: The approach is iterative and flexible, with regular feedback loops provided to customers.
Waterfall: The process follows a linear and sequential approach, with project phases (planning, design, development, testing and deployment) strictly ordered. There is minimal revisiting of earlier stages.
- Planning
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Agile: There is less emphasis on upfront planning. Project requirements evolve based on findings throughout the project.
Waterfall: Well-defined requirements and detailed planning are required upfront.
- Flexibility
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Agile: Agile is highly adaptable, as changes in requirements can be accommodated during sprints.
Waterfall: Waterfall is less flexible, as changes can be costly and time-consuming to implement once a phase is complete.
- Testing
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Agile: Testing is integrated throughout the development process in each sprint.
Waterfall: Testing is typically done at the end of specific stages.
- Collaboration
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Agile: Daily interaction between stakeholders and project team members allows for frequent priority adjustment.
Waterfall: There are distinct project phases with limited interaction between stakeholders and project team members due to distinct project phases.
- Technical Excellence
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Agile: The focus is on building high-quality products with regular reviews, testing and best design practices.
Waterfall: The priority is meeting phase deadlines over ongoing technical quality checks.
- Simplicity
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Agile: The priority is critical features to avoid unnecessary complexity.
Waterfall: Every detail is typically planned upfront, which potentially builds unnecessary features.
- Self-Organizing Teams
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Agile: Teams have the authority to make decisions and solve problems, creating an environment of ownership and accountability.
Waterfall: The structure is typically hierarchal with predefined roles and minimal flexibility.
- Continuous Improvement
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Agile: Regular reflection periods are implemented throughout the project to learn and adjust approaches.
Waterfall: There are limited opportunities to make project adjustments once a phase is underway.
Ultimately, Agile suits projects with uncertain requirements, rapid change and a need for early feedback. Waterfall is best for projects with clear requirements, defined scope and minimal risk of change.
Organizations Using the Agile Methodology
- Papa John’s Pizza and Panera Bread
- Franklin Templeton
- Insurance Corporation of British Columbia (ICBC)
- Hospital El Pilar
Instructor Bio
Ty Tabernik, PMP, PMI-ACP
Ty Tabernik is currently a tenured professor in the Computer and Information Science Department at Trevecca Nazarene University in Nashville, Tennessee. With over 40 years of industry experience, Ty has consulted for numerous corporations and held various management roles before transitioning to education.
During his tenure in industry, Ty successfully managed projects of varying scales, from smaller initiatives spanning several months to multimillion-dollar endeavors spanning three to four years.
Ty brings over 25 years of experience teaching Project Management Professional (PMP) exam preparation courses. He holds both PMP and Project Management Institute – Agile Certified Professional (PMI-ACP) certifications and is a Scrum Master and Six Sigma Green Belt. Additionally, he serves as the Program Lead for the Project Management Concentration in Trevecca's MBA program.
Ty's instruction extends beyond project management; he has also taught certification preparation classes for the Association of Supply Chain Management / APICS for over 40 years. His expertise covers certifications such as Certified in Planning and Inventory Management (CPIM), Certified in Logistics, Transportation and Distribution (CLTD) and Certified Supply Chain Professional (CSCP).
With a PhD in Information Technology and six master's degrees ranging in areas from instruction design to computer science and quantitative methods, Ty brings knowledge and experience he is excited to share with Agile Project Management Workshop participants.