Project-based development use case in Agile Development
릴리스 버전: Australia
업데이트 날짜 2026년 03월 13일
소요 시간: 4분
An example of project-based development and delivery model in Agile Development.
The usual activities involved in a project-based Agile Development include the
following:
Product Backlog: Product owners maintain the product backlog. They continuously groom
their backlogs by adding stories, prioritizing and estimating them.
In Agile Development 2.0, navigate to Agile Development > Backlog > All Stories for the list of all the stories.
Project Backlog: Product owners select the prioritized stories and assign them to one or
more projects, thus creating the project backlog. Product owners can create one or more
projects and capture additional details such as required resources, cost, risk, strategic
alignment. All these projects undergo portfolio prioritization process, and the selected
projects are executed by the project teams.
주:
Some organizations also define release
cycles such as quarterly release, bi-yearly release, yearly release. They then move the
stories from product backlog to the release backlog. In these cases, stories are assigned
to the projects from the release backlog.
In Agile Development 2.0, navigate
to Agile Development > Stories and select Assign to project to assign stories to a
new or existing project.
You can also open an existing project and associate stories to
the project from the backlog. These stories are then executed as part of project
execution.
Assignment of stories: Assign the stories of the project to an assignment group so that
the team can pick these up in the upcoming sprints.
In Agile Development 2.0, select
the stories that you want to assign to a release, select Assign to
release/group and specify an assignment group.
Sprint planning: The scrum teams define their sprint schedule such as two-week sprint or
three-week sprint. They work with the product owner, and select stories from the release
backlog that should be completed in each sprint to create Sprint Backlog. The group members
along with product owner and scrum master decide stories for each sprint using Sprint
Planning.
In
Agile Development 2.0, navigate to Agile Development > Agile Board > Sprint Planning.
The following illustration provides a high-level overview of the workflow in a project-based
Agile Development environment.그림 1. Project-based Agile Development workflow example