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    Agile Delivery Methods
    UBC Sauder School of Business

    Agile Delivery Methods

    UBC Sauder School of Business, Vancouver
    16 daysDuration
    onlineFormat
    EnglishLanguage
    InnovationTopic

    Next Available Cohort

    Choose your preferred start date

    Sep 11 - Oct 4, 2026
    16 days Β· online Β· Instructor-Led
    Open
    $919

    All-inclusive program fee

    About This Program

    This course cuts through the noise with a clear, practical introduction to the principles, frameworks, and practices that underpin modern agile delivery. Grounded in the Agile Manifesto's four values and twelve principles, you will explore how Lean thinking, Scrum, and Kanban each approach the challenge of delivering value, and how to determine which approach fits the problem at hand. Through interactive discussions, demonstrations, and hands-on assignments, you will develop the vocabulary, judgment, and confidence to contribute meaningfully on agile teams or to evaluate and advocate for agile approaches within your own organization.

    Why UBC Sauder School of Business?

    Anchored in Vancouver β€” one of the most internationally connected cities in North America β€” UBC Sauder sits at the intersection of Pacific Rim commerce, Indigenous business leadership, and sustainability-oriented management thinking. For senior professionals who need more than an Atlantic or European perspective on global business, Sauder offers something genuinely harder to find: rigorous Canadian academia with an Asia-Pacific orientation baked into the curriculum, not bolted on.

    Your Profile

    • Project and Product Managers who want to understand iterative planning and how agile changes the role of the project manager.
    • Business and Systems Analysts who work within agile delivery environments and need to understand how requirements management evolves in iterative contexts.
    • Team Leaders and Managers seeking to support agile team performance, remove blockers, and understand what effective agile leadership looks like in practice.
    • Operations and process professionals looking to apply Lean and Kanban principles to visualize workflow, limit work in progress, and improve throughput in non-software contexts.
    • Leaders evaluating agile adoption, assessing whether and how to introduce agile methods into their teams or broader organizational transformation efforts.

    Benefits

    • Compare Scrum and Kanban and select the right framework for your delivery context.
    • Apply Lean-agile practices to reduce waste, limit work in progress, and improve team throughput.
    • Run agile ceremonies effectively and contribute to high-performing cross-functional teams.
    • Build the vocabulary and judgment to evaluate agile approaches across your organization.

    What You'll Learn

    • Module 1 - Making the Case for Agile: an introduction to agile principles; the Agile Manifesto: four values and twelve principles; limitations of traditional waterfall delivery; industries and contexts where agile thrive; the business case for adopting an agile framework; trends accelerating agile adoption beyond technology.
    • Module 2 - Lean Thinking and Agile Foundations: origins of Lean and its relationship to agile; incremental and iterative delivery; eliminating waste and maximizing flow; empirical process control: transparency, inspection, and adaptation; key elements of agile delivery.
    • Module 3: Scrum (an iterative agile framework) and Kanban (a flow-based agile method).
    • Module 4 - Agile Teams in Practice: how agile project management and engineering practices combine; agile team structures and cross-functional collaboration; choosing the right agile approach for your context; what to expect from high-performing agile teams; agile at scale: when a single team isn't enough; getting started: steps toward an agile transformation.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How to Apply

    1. 1

      Check your eligibility

      Review the entry requirements listed on this page. Most executive programs require 8–15 years of professional experience.

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    3. 3

      Contact the school

      Send a message directly to UBC Sauder School of Business via Gradia to request a brochure or speak with an admissions advisor.

    4. 4

      Prepare your application

      Gather your CV, reference letters, and any required test scores. Many EMBA programs waive standardised tests for senior candidates.

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      Submit your application

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