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Holiday reading and watching from the ReBoot Co. team December 2022
The ReBoot Co. team shares what they’ll be watching and reading over the holidays.
9. Transforming Ways of Working
THE TROUBLE WITH FRAMEWORKS
Some people install the practices, processes and governance parts of agility and neglect to attend to Principles, Values and Behaviours. Framework salespeople are incentivised to implement overly prescriptive heavy frameworks, because it’s a money making machine for them. Paying for certifications makes the Framework owner money, but does it make you better at delivering value?
Agile Australia 2022
AGILE AUSTRALIA 2022
In this blog post, we summarise Alex Stoke’s Linkedin posts attending & MC’ing at Agile Australia- if you didn’t attend, hopefully this gives you a good summary of what you missed, see you next time!
8. Transforming Ways of Working
MAKING EVERYONE SMARTER
In one of my favourite jobs more than a decade ago I was complaining to my boss at the time that the task to Transform to Agile ways of working was impossible. There were just too many people working in “the wrong” way, and
7. Transforming Ways of Working
GATHERING ADVOCATES
When I first came across Agile Software Development in the late 90s I was working as a developer in the UK, and my path came via a methodology called DSDM that we used on one of our client’s gigs. DSDM was represented by Arie van Bennekum in Snowbird in 2001 when the original authors of the Manifesto for Agile Software development gathered.
6. Transforming Ways of Working
CREATING AWARENESS FOR NECESSARY CHANGE
When I experienced my first Transformation “in the wild” I felt cast adrift in a big sea of impossibility. It was my first time out of a consultancy and inside a business as a perm employee. I was responsible for technology delivery in an Insurance Company. How would I go about communicating the need for better, more adaptable ways of working when Transformation wasn’t part of my official role?
Kill Dumb Policies
“The Red Hulk was angry. Kaizen had failed, fallen flat. Why?”
Relatively new into an organisation I ran a workshop to introduce the concept of Kaizen, the Japanese management technique for improvement, and start an improvement working group. Not only did the session feel like it had fallen flat but there was no interest in further work around improving. I was stumped
Who’s your customer?
“If you know who your customer is then you can find out what they need and what they think about the value you’re providing to them”
Sounds like a straightforward question and an easy one to answer but is it actually?
So many businesses and the people within them believe they’re delivering the right service and value but are they doing it with an ever so slightly wrong understanding of the actual customer?