Rapid Application Development (RAD) is to Agile what the Walkman CD Player is to MP3. Revolutionary for its time, fondly remembered, and the gateway to an explosion of innovation. Now, the audio file is ubiquitous and for every software project, there's Agile. So, how did we get here?
The Waterfall method of development has roots in conventional engineering. It involves planned and sequential steps followed to completion. This linear progression has its place. But, in the case of application development, you'll likely have seen how it can - often, does - lead to projects running over time and budget.
Given the emerging fast-paced world of digital products in the early 90's, we needed a different approach. In 1991, James Martin of IT engineering fame published his titular book on the subject and coined the phrase, saying:
'Rapid Application Development (RAD) is a development lifecycle designed to give much faster development and higher-quality results than those achieved with the traditional lifecycle. It is designed to take the maximum advantage of powerful development software that has evolved recently.'
It's a process that focuses less on rigid plans and more on fast, iterative cycles of prototyping. It relies on new discoveries, tools and user feedback throughout.
These kinds of 'Agile ideas' were not new. Still, the emphasis on adaptive and incremental methods as applied to software development broke ground on popularizing this way of thinking.
Martin's RAD method is split into four phases:
These form the basis of our modern understanding of Agile (think also Kanban, Lean and Scrum), and have parallels with Design Thinking, more generally. And, you will recognize the underlying roots of today's Software Development Lifecycle for process and release management:
Adopters of RAD aimed for higher quality outcomes that met user needs, while avoiding the pitfalls of waterfall development. However, as much as the method centers on the user, this people-first approach failed to extend to the needs of development teams themselves. Why? It relied on a certain level of expert input and the big picture was likely to become lost in fragmented cycles of prototyping.
So, a group of engineers came together in the early 2000s and created the 'Agile Manifesto', which reached over 50 percent adoption between 2012-2015, under the promotion of the Agile Alliance.
Agile offers practical, specific ways of working, from stand-ups to sprint cycles. These ways of working align RAD's 'quick and dirty' prototyping principle with structural process management systems, split by feature and built into nested layers of user journeys. That way, you get visibility on progress, clear accountability for team members and you can shift priorities as needed.
In 2021, 95 percent of organizations use some form of Agile. Yet it's becoming clear that technology is outdated almost the moment it reaches the market. Just as we reach mass adoption, do we need to take another hard look at our assumptions about good process management? How can automation enhance our capacities to build amazing software, fast?
For more content like this, check out our article on Waterfall vs. Agile.