ARAÚJO, N. M. de.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/9221440085527841; ARAÚJO, Narallynne Maciel de.
Resumo:
Despite a considerable amount of research aimed at understanding agile leadership in software
development teams, much of the existing literature focuses exclusively on the perspective
of leaders. Previous research has shown that, for leaders, agile leadership is a shared,
dynamic, and collaborative process that promotes belonging and cultural integration. However,
there is a gap in understanding how developers who do not occupy leadership positions
perceive this approach since the agile concept aims at self-management and self-organization
of software engineering teams. This raises important questions about how leaders and nonleaders
perceive and share agile leadership. Understanding these differences is essential
because leadership perceptions directly influence collaboration, communication, motivation,
and efficiency of software products and processes. Investigating these perspectives helps
identify points of convergence and divergence that affect team alignment, contributing to the
improvement of agile processes. Thus, the main objective of this thesis is to evaluate how
leaders and non-leaders perceive agile leadership, improving leadership processes and practices
in agile contexts. To this end, two complementary studies were conducted using qualitative
and quantitative approaches. The first was a case study with two development teams,
investigating differences in leadership perception. The results indicate that while leaders
perceive leadership as shared and collaborative, non-leaders often see it as individual and
hierarchical. In addition, factors such as team tenure, technical experience, team size, and
aptitude influence leadership distribution. Then, to triangulate the data and complement the
case study, the quantitative approach tested hypotheses and identified correlations between
leadership styles and assignment responsibilities, as well as differences between leadership
assignment factors and situations in which this assignment occurs. Among the main contributions,
this thesis proposes recommendations to improve agile practices, promote collaboration,
and align expectations between leaders and non-leaders to increase process efficiency
and software product quality.