October 2009

hiring strategy, HTP

People are Not Tools

I’ve been reviewing job descriptions from clients that are a laundry list of tools. Or, that ask for “significant experience” with a particular technology. No, no, no. People are not tools. They are human beings who have specific qualities, preferences, and technical and non-technical skills. When you think about those personal qualities, think about these […]

newsletter

You Can’t Do All the Work. Now What?

Rothman Consulting Group, Inc. Pragmatic Manager, Vol. 6#3, You Can’t Do All the Work. Now What?  October 21 , 2009  In This Issue: You Can’t Do All the Work. Now What? Manage Your Project Portfolio Only 6 Spots Left at AYE   You Can’t Do All the Work. Now What? In the last Pragmatic Manager newsletter,

MPD

Expressing Technical Debt as User Stories Helps with ROI

I’m not a fan of ROI (Return on Investment) measures for software, except in the case where you have waste. Several of my clients have huge technical debt which creates waste for the development staff (not just developers, anyone involved with the development of the product). When you’re dealing with waste, user stories just might

Books, MPD

Lovely Review of Manage Your Project Portfolio

I’m slow to post this one: Giordano Scalzo’s lovely review of Manage Your Project Portfolio is up at Reviewing Manage Your Project Portfolio. I love the part where he says: This book is a must read for everyone involved in IT world, from junior developer ’till C-level executive. As usual, Johanna Rothman uses a very

agile, MPD

What Would a Successful Agile All-Remote Team Look Like?

In their  comments to my post, Agile and Remote People: Part 1, Telecommuting, Matt, Lisa, Pete, Abby all had great rebuttals. They successfully make their remote teams work. They have successfully built trust. They use a variety of communications tools that allow their team members to work together. Good for them. (I mean it. I am

agile, MPD

Agile and Remote People: Part 1, Telecommuting

A twitter follower was concerned with a piece of my post, Do What’s Effective For You, when I spoke of team bits. Was I saying you could not telecommute and do agile? First, let me explain what a team bit is. A team bit is a person or a group of people grouped by geography

agile, MPD

"When Does the Spec Freeze?"

At a prospective client, a senior manager asked me, “In agile, when does the spec freeze?” I said it either didn’t, or did at the end of any iteration in which people wrote a spec. He had a puzzled look on his face, so I explained that if you discuss how to design or what

hiring strategy, HTP

What Do Agile Testers Look Like?

I recently spoke with a recruiter. “I don’t understand the QA market anymore. No one is hiring except for agile people. And they want people who are developers. What’s happening to QA?” Manual testing was never quality assurance; it was testing. And, manual testing is low-value, high cost work, especially when you compare it to

MPD, personal

Regaining My Equilibrium

I’ve had a rough month. When I returned from Agile 2009, my right ear didn’t unblock from the plane. I couldn’t hear out of it, and it was blocked. I didn’t think much of it–I went to the doctor who said, “yup, you’ve got fluid. Take decongestants.” I did, and the vertigo got worse. Finally,

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