With the increasingly evolving agile product development culture of today, the provision of compliance controls usually occurs in the form of an invitation to pace and imagination. This research paper examines a model of bridging cooperation between product teams and compliance officers in agile cultures. The major aim of this study is to identify the major success factors and major hurdles to seam-free integrated compliance and recommend a model embracing compliance culture with shared responsibility and sustained compliance. The study employs the mixed-methodology approach that entails quantitative data analysis of sprint-level data and qualitative analysis of team communication patterns. A six-month mixed-methods study across four agile teams in a financial technology company was conducted using sprint data, communication logs, and 24 interviews. Quantitative analysis revealed a 70% reduction in compliance issues (from 45 to 5 per quarter) and a 60% increase in sprint velocity (from 25 to 40 story points). Qualitative analysis showed improved trust, shared understanding, and proactive engagement when compliance was embedded early. It is discovered in this study that early and regular engagement of compliance officers in the agile development cycle, and the use of automated compliance tools with a shared knowledge base, can preclude significant compliance lag and product quality at scale. The paper illustrates a new compliance integration model and best practices for enabling productive collaboration between product and compliance teams.
Padma Vayuvegula (Thu,) studied this question.