Someone (I think possibly John Cutler) made a good point about this, which is that by now the early and middle adopters of classical manifesto-style "Agile" have absorbed it so thoroughly that it's no longer something deserving of a special term, it's merely the way things are done.
This leaves the late adopters, and the sociopaths whose main interest is extracting money from the late adopters. As a result, it's becoming a safe bet that anyone using the word "Agile" unironically is either going to inflict upon you whim-based development with added Post-It notes, or sell you an enormous slab of process binderware with bonus added two day certification courses. (From which your managers will return having spent the entire course answering e-mails on their laptop, and proceed to inflict upon you whim-based development with added JIRA.)
This leaves the late adopters, and the sociopaths whose main interest is extracting money from the late adopters. As a result, it's becoming a safe bet that anyone using the word "Agile" unironically is either going to inflict upon you whim-based development with added Post-It notes, or sell you an enormous slab of process binderware with bonus added two day certification courses. (From which your managers will return having spent the entire course answering e-mails on their laptop, and proceed to inflict upon you whim-based development with added JIRA.)