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5.4 Delivery Strategy ​

One of the PM's first "process" decisions is selecting the high-level delivery strategy. In 2026, this is not a religious choice between Scrum or Predictiveβ€”it is a logical choice based on Risk and Frequency of Value.


🧭 The Selection Matrix ​

Use these diagnostic markers to choose the right path for your project.

Predictive

Best for Stable environments with known solutions.

  • High cost of change
  • Single final release
  • Detailed upfront planning
Adaptive (Agile)

Best for Volatile environments with emerging requirements.

  • Low cost of change
  • Frequent incremental releases
  • Continuous planning (Sprints)
Hybrid

Best for Complex projects with mixed characteristics.

  • Stable foundation / Agile features
  • Predictive dates / Agile path
  • Gated releases

πŸ› οΈ Tailoring Factors ​

When determining the strategy during initiation, consider the Tailoring Matrix:

  1. Complexity: How many moving parts? High complexity often benefits from Agile's empirical loops.
  2. Risk: Can you afford to fail fast? If yes, use Agile. If failure is catastrophic (Bridge Building), use Predictive.
  3. Frequency of Delivery: Does the customer need value every 2 weeks, or can they wait 1 year?
  4. Resource Availability: Do you have a dedicated cross-functional team (Agile) or shared resources (Predictive)?

πŸ’‘ The 2026 Standard

Most modern enterprise projects are Hybrid. They use Predictive milestones for the "Business Case" and "Go-Live" while allowing teams to use Agile "Sprints" for execution and refinement.


πŸ“ Exam Insight: If a project has high uncertainty but a non-negotiable legal deadline, the best strategy is Hybrid. Use Predictive guardrails for the date and Agile cycles for the content.

Released under the MIT License.