Found 563 Search Results for digital transformation

    How to Build a Ranking Model That Drives Better Portfolio Outcomes

    The hardest part of portfolio management isn’t generating ideas — it’s choosing which ones truly deserve investment, and in what order. As demand grows and capacity remains constrained, portfolio leaders face constant pressure to make confident, defensible trade-offs. Yet in many organizations, prioritization still relies heavily on influence, urgency, or fragmented data rather than a...

    How to Turn Portfolio Priorities into Achievable Targets

    Organizations invest significant effort in prioritizing initiatives. Strategic alignment is defined. Financial impact is evaluated. Risk and feasibility are assessed. A ranked portfolio takes shape, reflecting enterprise objectives and leadership intent. However, even well-prioritized portfolios can break down during planning. As funding decisions are made and delivery plans begin to form, gaps emerge. Total investment...

    6 Best Practices for Lean Portfolio Management

    In our last post, we shared the differences between traditional portfolio management and the Lean Portfolio Management approach and why they matter for organizations looking to embrace agility at the enterprise level. At some point, efforts to increase agility will be stunted by traditional portfolio management practices, and it’s not enough to simply improve workflow management...

    Innovation Management Trends

    One competitive advantage many top-performing companies have is how they incorporate ideation and innovation management into the company’s culture.

    Learnings from a Newly Formed Agile Team

    As we move through the fourth program increment (PI), I asked members of our team to reflect and consider how far we’ve come in our Agile transformation journey.

    Prediction #4: The single vendor ALM stack becomes extinct in organizations with more than two developers | Tasktop

    Development managers at large organizations with monolithic application lifecycle management (ALM) stacks once had it good. ALM components were well integrated, played nicely with one another, and when they didn’t, there was someone to call. But lightweight issue trackers started to move into the organization, popularized by the need for developer-centric collaboration facilities. At a...