Translator

Let’s Define Our Starting Place

I'm telling you guys... if you're not participating over on the AgilePMI Yahoo! Group, you are missing out on some great conversation. Think about it... this is THE issue going on right now impacting the agile community. We talk about agile and transformation... but the traditional establishment holds the keys in most of our organizations. Unless we can show them how to transition safely, we are relegated to bottom-up, grass roots agile initiatives... most of which have a very low probability of making any kind of meaningful difference in our companies.

That said, one of the problems I think we have... not just on the Yahoo! group, but as a community in general, is that we often talk past each other on pretty key issues. I was going back and forth with Dan Mezick and Dennis Stevens on the idea of team authorization. All of a sudden it dawned on me that Dan and I agreed in principle on where we wanted to take the organization, but Dan wanted to discuss the organization as it should be... I wanted to talk about the organization as it was, and how we can be successful in it.

It seems to me, that in any conversation, we have at least three possible starting points for debate:

1. The current state
2. The future state
3. The transition state

My guess is that most people in the group agree that something is wrong with the current state of software project management. That is why they spend time reading and posting and exploring how to do things differently. I'd also guess that most folks in the agile community agree on the ideal end state. We might have some differences of opinion around Scrum or XP or Lean or Kanban, but I think we all value the idea of empowering teams, respecting individuals, and helping organizations deliver the most value possible.

Some of us are so passionate about the way things should be, that point of view becomes the starting place, and they argue for change right now. Others of us have heard those messages and found that they don't resonate given the current regulatory climate in our companies. These people want to talk about what they can do today... without some sort of massive transformation. They don't have any clear way to make the kinds of changes that the 'future state' people are advocating. Others, like me, want to talk about how to get from point A to point B as safely as possible.

Understanding the point of view from which the other person is arguing from can be really valuable as we're trying to move this discussion forward. I hate seeing us run in circles with each other when there is probably more we agree on than we really think. The futurists hold the vision, the today people have the current reality, and the transition folks want to find a way to bridge the two. Maybe if we can start our conversations by clearly stating our starting point... and have more meaningful discussions around all three different viewpoints... we might have a way of moving this thing without constantly going around and around, without ever really increasing our understanding.

By the way... here is a link the Agile PMI group if you are interested in joining the conversation:

http://finance.groups.yahoo.com/group/pmiagile/

Oh, by the way... here is day #3 and day #4 of Summer Camp... have fun!

Summer Camp Day #3



Summer Camp Day #4


Leave a Reply

 

 

 

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

A Few Thoughts on the Economics of Software Product Development

Some of you probably already get this… some of you might even disagree… but unless you are building software as a hobby… chances are, you building software for money. In other words, someone is paying you to write software for them. Why would someone pay you money to show up and write software? They are [...]

Podcast with IT Kanban

Kevin Ryan at IT Kanban just released a podcast with me. Check it out
Cheers
Mattias

Lean from the Trenches – Managing Large-Scale Projects with Kanban

I’ve published another book! This one’s called “Lean from the Trenches“. It is about how we scaled a 60-person project by combing techniques from Kanban, Scrum, and XP. I chose this title because it really it illustrates how to put Lean principles into practice in a software project, especially the notion of an end-to-end Kanban read more »

Coming to Brazil

Hi Brazil! I’m happy to say that I’ll be visiting you in a few weeks. I’ll be involved in two public events together with Samuel Crescêncio: Feb 10: Public seminar about Lean & Agile (in Florianopolis). More info coming soon. Feb 13-14:  Certified ScrumMaster course in São Paulo. The course will be in English, but Samuel read more »

AgileExams.com Controversy Resolved…Sort Of

Well it turns out the “controversy” about AgileExams turned out to be the biggest of misunderstandings. The Testimonials Were Authentic: Several of AgileExams customers contacted me and revealed the root cause of this confusion is the fussiness of PMI.org’s online … Continue reading