Running Agile

A Practitioner's View To Lean & Agile

Posts Tagged ‘Lean’

Lean Software Development online training

Posted by Christophe on September 8, 2009

Alan Shalloway from Net Objectives is re-broadcasting his online lean training series.

Details on their website.

Missed the whole thing? Get the CD!

Posted in Alan Shalloway, Lean | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Lean & Kanban 2009 – Videos

Posted by Christophe on July 23, 2009

If you didn’t manage to get to Miami for the inaugural Lean & Kanban conference then you can now watch most the presentations.

Posted in Conferences, Kanban, Lean, Videos | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Pay more, it’s cheaper!

Posted by Christophe on April 21, 2009

save_moneyFinancial crisis. Cost cutting measures. Cheaper vendors. Saving money.

Does that sound familiar? Effective?

Think again.

Here are a few counter examples:

  • a US company let go their expensive $50/h local resources in favor of $20/h [put-a-country-over 6,000 miles away] resources… and encurs heavier expenses. Needed a new local project manager, needed a remote project manager (language problems with the team), needed to add more remote resources -more junior resources-, missed their key deadlines by months
  • a company switched their first tier CDN for a smaller CDN, at 20% discount per Gb… and encurs heavier expenses. Smaller CDN has lower cache rate, creates more traffic to origin servers -with expense bandwidth; smaller CDN hardware creates higher packet loss ration, also increasing traffic.
  • a company cut on good coffeehouse quality coffee… and encurs heavier expenses. Employees leave the office and walk to the neerest [put-a-popular-coffee-place-name], wasting half an hour every day.

and on and and on

Should companies cut unecessary cost in the downtime. Definitively.

Yet, doing it without a deep understanding of the impact on the whole value chain, and hidden consequences can turn disastrous.

The mistake is to confuse rate and cost.

Rather than spending a lot of time on cutting rates, kill your low value / resource intense projects, and focus  on your top products: increase quality, accelerate your delivery cycle and wow your customers.

Posted in Lean, Value Stream Mapping | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Lean Organizations to Support Agile Teams

Posted by Christophe on April 19, 2009

New videos from Agile 2008 are still coming out. In this one, Robin Dymond gives an overview of Lean, how it can help take Agile to the ‘next level’ and why organizations that fail to change will not have successful Agile teams. Robin describes an organizational mismatch between traditional hierarchies and team structures. He believes that organizations will need to reorganize around teams to get the most out of Agile.

Posted in Agile2008, Lean, Videos | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Dude, where’s my value stream map?

Posted by Christophe on March 16, 2009

downward-facing-dog-pose2

The Los Angeles Department of Animal Services runs with a budget shortfall of $400,000.

The voucher system that provided free spaying and neutering services to low-income owners?

Zip. Kaput. Gone.

Savings? $150,00. Nice!

Another piece of information I found today:

With the elimination of the spaying and neutering program, it is estimated that a large number of dogs and cats in the streets will have to be put down, at a cost 4x higher cost.

So voila:

1. take care of problems at the source, don’t fix the symptoms
2. align individuals, teams and departments along value stream goals
3. optimize the whole, not the parts

And for value streams in the government, well, that’s a while different story…

Posted in Lean, Value Stream Mapping | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Lean Thinking for Agile Process Evolution

Posted by Christophe on January 31, 2009

Check Corey Ladas latest 3 vidoes on lean, kanban, scrumban and more… right here.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Alan Shalloway on “Principles and Practices of Lean-Agile Software Development”

Posted by Christophe on November 22, 2008

In this presentation held during Agile 2008, Alan Shalloway presents the Lean software development principles and practices and how they can benefit to Agile practitioners.

Posted in Agile2008, Alan Shalloway, Lean, Videos | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

David Anderson on “Future Directions for Agile”

Posted by Christophe on August 23, 2008

David Anderson (now president of Modus Cooperandi) is definitively one of the fresh minds in what some would call the “aging narrow minded agile movement”. He has been an active practitioner for years (sprint PCS/microsoft/corbis) and is talking the language of people that actually have to deliver value for their company.

In his presentation “Future Directions for Agile” at Agile 2008 he showed how kanban can serve to unify the agile and lean principles. He also called for stopping the Agile arrogance and offered to join forces with the CMMI folks to measure enterprise success.

Posted in Agile2008, David Anderson, Kanban, Lean, Videos | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Lean beef

Posted by Christophe on August 11, 2008

As many other sunday evenings, I was in line yesteday at my local supermarket deli counter.

Three employees, three meat slicers, three customers (including me), and a simple need: 1/2 lb of ham sliced thin.

So far so good…

besides the fact that I have to wait to get served.

For what you might ask.

For one of the two busy guys to help me.

Why you might ask.

Is one of the slicer not working? nope.
Is the third guy busy doing something else? not doing anything.

So why? why is he not taking the order?

He simply told me “I can’t operate the slicer sir”, with a face full of boredom.

This is what happens when you don’t cross train your team, don’t get them self organized and don’t pay attention to your customers.

Posted in Knowledge, Lean | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Mary Poppendieck on “The role of leadership in software development”

Posted by Christophe on June 21, 2008

When you look around, there are a lot of leaders recommended for software development. We have the functional manager and the project manager, the scrum master and the black belt, the product owner and the customer-on-site, the technical leader and the architect, the product manager and the chief engineer.
Clearly that’s too many leaders. So how many leaders should there be, what should they do, what shouldn’t they do, and what skills do they need?
This is a presentation and discussion
Mary Poppendieck of leadership roles in software development — what works, what doesn’t and why.

Posted in Leadership, Lean, Mary Poppendieck, Videos | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
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