Agile vs Waterfall — Why the Wrong Choice Costs More Than You Think
Most software projects don't fail because of bad code. They fail because the delivery model was mismatched to the project from the start. Choosing between Agile and Waterfall isn't a technical decision it's a strategic one, and getting it wrong has direct consequences on cost, timeline, and the quality of what you actually ship. Here's what you need to understand before your next project kicks off. What the choice actually means in practice Waterfall works sequentially. Requirements are locked, design follows, development follows design, testing follows development. The appeal is predictability clear milestones, formal approvals, documented scope. For projects where requirements genuinely won't change, that predictability is valuable. Agile works iteratively. Development happens in short sprints, stakeholders review working software regularly, and priorities can shift between cycles based on real feedback. The appeal is adaptability you course-correct before th...