MPD

Books, MPD

A Funny Story About Manage It!

Dave Liebreich sent me this email: I’m working with the new hire in our group, bringing him up to speed on our stuff. He noticed that I brought in my copy of “Manage It!”, and asked if it was to help me manage him. [pause for laughter] Never work for someone who refers to you […]

agile, MPD

When is a Scrum Master (or a PM) Not?

I’ve been busy the last few weeks (as you can tell by the paucity of posts :-). I’ve been working with project managers, Scrum Masters, and technical leads who have been thrust into the role of Scrum Master. Here are some examples of the problems these nice folks have had: “When I want to use

MPD

A Product Release Plan–Who Knew?

Adam, from Write That Down, likes Manage it!. Here’s what he has to say: There is a great book called Manage It!, by Johanna Rothman. She does not disappoint, and really gets into the nitty gritty details about managing projects. While this is billed as a “project management” effort, it really does apply to product

Books, MPD

Manage It! is a Jolt Award Finalist

I’m proud to announce that Manage It! Your Guide to Modern, Pragmatic Project Management is a Jolt Award finalist. Andy made a short video you might like to see. I’m excited. Manage It! is up against other fine books, so there’s no guarantee it will win an award. But it’s very exciting to have made

MPD, podcast

New Podcast at Pragmatic Bookshelf

Daniel Steinberg, my editor for Manage It! interviewed me a couple of weeks ago. The podcast is here. We discussed some of the issues I’ve seen in organizations on projects. Some of the ideas we discussed were: What does the project manager do, even for an agile project? Has anything changed in project management? What

MPD

Certifications Are for Cars, Not People

There’s an car dealership advertising a multiple-point certification for pre-owned vehicles. To me that translates into “checklist for used cars.” That’s what a certification for people based on book knowledge is also–a checklist that a person knew the right answer. Nothing about the experience or if the experience that led to that knowledge was successful.

lifecycle, MPD

Using Multiple Life Cycles in Combination on a Project, Part 3

I’ve also used Agile life cycles (Scrum with different size timeboxes) in combination on a project. Here, the developers in the corporate location had a series of features that were big. I did suggest they break the features apart into smaller chunks for ease of estimation and implementation, but they didn’t want to 🙂 The

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