Empirical Process Control | Glossary

Definition

Empirical Process Control is a core Scrum principle, and stands distinguished from other Agile frameworks. It’s not a process or a technique for building products, but is a framework within which various processes and techniques can be employed.

With Empirical Process Control, the scope of the product and the processes aren’t fixed overall. Instead, a small, shippable slice of the product is created, inspected and adapted to the way it’s going to be built. Measures of transparency are also allowed to enable clarity in inspection.

Further Reading

  • “Introduction to Empirical Processes and Semiparametric Inference” (book), by Michael R. Kosorok.

Extreme Programming Explained: Embrace Change | Book Series

Overview:

Embrace Change is the 2nd edition of Extreme Programming Explained book Series, authored by Kent Beck. This book presents the 5 years worth of experiences, growth and change revolving around XP. It’s a must read book for anyone who is interested to know how you and your team can understand the path of new improvement with XP. The previous edition of the same book teaches what XP is really about- and it changed the way people think about Software Development. The 2nd edition speaks more about why XP, and the principles and motivations behind XP.

Authors:

Kent Beck

Published In:

2004