planning, scaling and flowing within your agile organization
TRANSCRIPT
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About Dimitri PonomareffDimitri Ponomareff (www.linkedin.com/in/dimka5) is a Coach. Whether it's a sports team, software products or entire organizations, Dimitri has that ability to relate and energize people. He is consistently recognized as a very passionate and successful change agent, with an overwhelming capacity to motivate and mobilize teams on their path to continuous improvements. He is a master facilitator, as well as a captivating speaker with consistent, positive feedback regarding his ability to engage an audience.
As a certified Coach, Project Manager and Facilitator of "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People", Dimitri brings a full spectrum of knowledge in his delivery of methodologies. Through teaching by example, he is able to build teams of people who understand where to focus their work to generate the most value.
He has coached and provided tailor-made services and training for a multitude of organizations. The short list includes, American Express, Charles Schwab, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, Choice Hotels International, JDA Software, LifeLock, First Solar, Mayo Clinic and Phoenix Children's Hospital. Dimitri enjoys his work, and does everything to ensure he shares his knowledge with others who seek it.
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Organizational agility...
is the ability of an organization to effectively sense and adapt in complex, rapidly changing conditions so that it can thrive as an organization.
Plan to achieve your goals
Scale to increase your productivity
Flow to gain the most efficiencies
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It’s all about communication
People who want IT must communicate with people who can
build IT.
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The Third Wave of Agile
http://www.solutionsiq.com/the-third-wave-of-agile/
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Plan
● The 5 levels of planning● Planning traceability● Let’s play Plinko!
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Planning Traceability
Vision
Roadmap
R1 R2 R3 Rn
Release 1
SP1
Iteration 1
ST1 STnST3ST2
Iteration n
ST1 STnST3ST2
Story 1
T1 TnT3T2
Story n
T1 TnT3T2
SPnSP3SP2
Release n
SP1 SPnSP3SP2
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Scale
● Scrum of Scrums● Scrum at Scale● Large Scale Scrum (LeSS)● Disciplined Agile Delivery (DAD) ● Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe)
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Scaling Scrum
“Scaling Scrum means getting rid of stuff because everything in Scrum is just in time, just enough,…and because any extra weight slows you down and increases cost. ” – Jeff Sutherland
Sutherland, Jeff. “Scaling Scrum – What People Are Not Talking About!”http://www.scruminc.com/scaling-Scrum-what-people-are-not/
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Scrum of Scrums
Each Scrum team identifies one person who attends the Scrum of Scrums meeting to coordinate the work of multiple Scrum teams.
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Scrum at Scale framework
● It’s a minimal extension of the core Scrum framework● Modularity is the key, by allowing context-driven
solutions and processes○ Modularity allows versatility○ Scrum is modular○ Deploying incrementally is easier○ Modularity supports a pattern library
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Large Scale Scrum (LeSS)
LeSS is a scaled up version of one-team Scrum, and it maintains many of the practices and ideas of one-team Scrum.
https://less.works
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Disciplined Agile Delivery (DAD) framework
DAD is goal driven and relies on hybrid Agile.
DAD provides guidance for adoption of an Agile framework.
Scaling factors
● Team size 2 < > 1000● Geographic distribution co-located < > global● Organizational distribution single division < > outsourcing● Compliance none < > life critical● Domain Complexity straightforward < > very complex● Technical Complexity straightforward < > very complex
http://www.disciplinedagiledelivery.com/
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Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe)
SAFe is an online, freely revealed knowledge base of proven success patterns for implementing Lean-Agile software and systems development at enterprise scale.
SAFe Principles
1. Take an economic view2. Apply systems thinking3. Assume variability; preserve options4. Build incrementally with fast, integrated learning cycles5. Base milestones on objective evaluation of working systems6. Visualize and limit the WIP, reduce batch sizes, and manage queue lengths7. Apply cadence, synchronize with cross domain planning8. Unlock the intrinsic motivation of knowledge workers9. Decentralize decision-making
http://scaledagileframework.com/
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Flow
● Flow in psychology● Flow in the workplace● Lean Thinking● Kanban
Practical flows...● Why, What & How● Plan, Do, Check, Act (PDCA)● Feature Driven Development (FDD)● Product, Epics & Stories
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Flow in psychology
Flow is the mental state of operation in which a person performing an activity is fully immersed in a feeling of energized focus, full involvement, and enjoyment in the process of the activity.
being in the zone
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Flow in the workplace
Flow has been used in the software world as being "wired in", “hack mode”, or simply “The Zone”.
The 3 conditions to achieve Flow by Mihály Csíkszentmihályi’s
1. Goals are clear 2. Feedback is immediate 3. A balance between opportunity and capacity
Group Flow or group cohesion can be achieved through● Creative spatial arrangements● Playground design● Parallel, organized working● Target group focus
● Advancement of existing one with prototyping● Increase in efficiency through visualization● Using differences among participants as an
opportunity, rather than an obstacle
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Lean thinking
Coined by James P. Womack and Daniel T. Jones, it describes how to organize
human activities to deliver more benefits to society and value to individuals
while eliminating waste, by focusing on these concepts:
● Value
● Value streams
● Flow
● Pull
● Perfection
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Toyota Production System (TPS)
http://www.toyota-global.com/company/vision_philosophy/toyota_production_system/
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Kanban
4 Principles1. Start with what you do now2. Agree to pursue incremental,
evolutionary change 3. Respect the current process,
roles, responsibilities and titles4. Encourage acts of leadership at
all levels
5 Properties1. Visualize the workflow2. Limit work-in-progress (WIP)3. Measure and Manage the flow4. Make process policies explicit5. Improve collaboratively using
models and empirical evidence
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Cumulative Flow Diagram
A great way to read the data behind a Kanban board is to use a cumulative flow diagram.
● Backlog size● Lead time● Cycle time● Work in progress● Work remaining
http://wall-skills.com/2013/cumulative-flow-diagram/
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Why, What & How
●WHY are we doing this?Voice of the stakeholder (Stakeholders)
●WHAT needs to be done?Voice of the user (Product Owner, Subject Matter Expert)
●HOW do we build it?Voice of the developer (Scrum Team)
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PDCA - Plan, Do, Check, Act
ACT
PLAN DO
PDCACycle
CHECK
Continuous Improvements
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Feature Driven Development (FDD)
www.torak.com
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Product, Epics & Stories
Story Story Story
Story Story Story
Story Story Story
Story Story Story
Story Story Story
Story Story Story
Product
Epics
Stories
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Organizational agility...
is the ability of an organization to effectively sense and adapt in complex, rapidly changing conditions so that it can thrive as an organization.
Plan to achieve your goals
Scale to increase your productivity
Flow to gain the most efficiencies
© Torak, Inc. www.torak.com
Agile Coaching, Staffing and Training.
Learn more at www.torak.com
Learn more at www.AgileTestingFramework.com
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This presentation was inspired by the work of many people and we have done our very best to attribute all authors of texts and images, and recognize any copyrights. If you think that anything in this presentation should be changed, added or removed, please contact us.
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