We see the side effects of agile development. "Bring new features to the user, the earlier the better" got totally wrong. Product Managers nowadays just use their customers to "try and test" new things. That works for beta users or early adopters.
Doesn't work for people that use the tools on a daily base and have their workflows.
As long as it is not consistently executed, people won't like the new "shift-paradigm" cause it makes everything super messy.
That's what happens with all new features introduced by Adobe, they'll never learn unless people cancel subscriptions.
We see the side effects of agile development. "Bring new features to the user, the earlier the better" got totally wrong. Product Managers nowadays just use their customers to "try and test" new things. That works for beta users or early adopters.
Doesn't work for people that use the tools on a daily base and have their workflows.
As long as it is not consistently executed, people won't like the new "shift-paradigm" cause it makes everything super messy.
That's what happens with all new features introduced by Adobe, they'll never learn unless people cancel subscriptions.