\section{Introduction} %Falar sobre unir tradicional (guiado por tarefas e atividades) e agil (guiado por funcionalidades) - nerur et al %Falar sobre mudanças estrutura organizacional organica (agil) e burocratica (tradicional) E-government projects are different from the others due to their complexity in terms of organizational size; resistance to changes (due to this size); innovation; impacts to end users and policies. The partnership between government and academia can be seen as a means of transferring technological knowledge for the creation of innovative e-government projects. This type of collaboration has challenges not only in the organization of the project and the alignment of objectives and rhythms, but also to overcome the high probability of failure of e-government projects. Despite the various solutions proposed to prevent these projects from failing, none of them actually seems to reduce this rate, which generates not only a waste of money but also a lack of services offered to society. Among the reasons for this failure, poor project management is one of the main. Several development processes were introduced with the intention to increase the chances of success in software projects, the traditional and agile methods are the most popular. The traditional method has been used for a long time as a way to discipline the software development process. This methodology can be characterized by the predictive approach, focus on documentation, processes oriented, and heavy based on tools\cite{comparisonAgileTraditional}. The agile method, on the other hand, embraces the adaptative approach. It is characterized by the people-oriented approach \cite{agileSoftwareDevelopment}, the collaboration with clients \cite{theNewMethodology}, small self-organized teams \cite{peopleFactor}, and the flexibility regarding planning \cite{agileSoftwareDevelopmentEco}. In a nutshell, both methodologies intend to increase the chance of the project success. While industry and academia are aligned on the use of agile methodologies for software development, the traditional approach is still preferred by the government (?). When government and academia resolve to come together for the development of an e-government solution, project management by institutions needs to be aligned. Changing the software development process represents a complex organizational change that includes structure, culture, and management practices. However, neither culture nor values ​​can be easily modified and the effort for this kind of transformation does not seem acceptable for development projects with tight deadlines and budgets. In this article we present practical ways to harmonize the traditional and agile approach in the management of a partnership project between government and academia. These practices are evidenced and validated using the case of the SPB project, which created an unprecedented platform for the Brazilian government. For this, we interviewed the various roles involved in the project: employees and stakeholders of the planning ministry and senior students and developers from the University of Brasília and São Paulo. Together, we analyze data collected from the management and communication tools used during 30 months of the project to find best practices, discuss the conflicts and validate lessons learned reported in our previous work\cite{meirelles2017spb} . % TODO: Verificar as seções Section \ref{sec:relatedwork} discuss the related work on blablabla. Section \ref{sec:casestudy} presents blablabla. Section \ref{sec:researchdesign} describes our research questions and methodology. Section \ref{sec:discussion} presents findings derived from our quantitative and qualitative analyses. Section \ref{sec:results} we describe the results. Finally, we present the limitations, related work and conclusions.