project management

agile, MPD

Board Tyranny in Iterations and Flow

I was at an experience report at Agile 2016 last week, Scaling Without Frameworks-Ultimate Experience Report. One of the authors, Daniel Vacanti said this: Flow focuses on unblocking work. Iterations (too often) focus on the person doing the work. At the time, I did not know Daniel’s twitter handle. I now do. Sorry for not

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Plan, Plan, Plan

Plan, Plan, Plan Do you like planning? You might be one of those people who likes to make lists and plan in great detail. I love my lists. I’m not big on huge, ginormous plans, but I do like a list of what to do now and the picture of where I’m headed. You might

MPD, writing

Reflecting on a Work Anniversary

I’ve been the technical editor for agileconnection.com for the past five years. It popped up to my LinkedIn network. Several people congratulated me on my work anniversary. I have learned many things in the past five years: Sometimes, people need “permission” to write what they feel. (They’re concerned they will be too bold, too loud,

MPD, product ownership

Product Owners and Learning, Part 5

When I think of POs and the team, I think of learning in several loops: The PO learns when the team finishes small features or creates a prototype so the PO can see what the team is thinking/delivering. The team learns more about its process and what the PO wants. If the Product Manager sees

MPD, product ownership

Product Owners and Learning, Part 3

Part 1 was about how the PO needs to see the big picture and develop the ranked backlog. Part 2 was about the learning that arises from small stories. This part is about ranking. If you specify deliverables in your big picture and small picture roadmaps, you have already done a gross form of ranking. You

MPD, product ownership

Product Owners and Learning, Part 4

Part 1 was about how the PO needs to see the big picture and develop the ranked backlog. Part 2 was about the learning that arises from small stories. Part 3 was about ranking. In this part, I’ll discuss the product owner value team and how to make time to do “everything,” and especially how to change

MPD, product ownership

Product Owners and Learning, Part 1

When I work with clients, they often have a “problem” with product ownership. The product owners want tons of features, don’t want to address technical debt, and can’t quite believe how long features will take.  Oh, and the POs want to change things as soon as they see them. I don’t see this as problems.To

MPD, product ownership

Product Owners and Learning, Part 2

In Part 1, I talked about the way POs think about the big picture and the ranked backlog. The way to get from the big picture to the ranked backlog is via deliverables in the form of small (user) stories. See the wikipedia page about user stories. Notice that they are a promise for a conversation.

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Create an Environment of Delivery

Create an Environment of Delivery One of the nice things about agile and lean approaches is that they focus on delivering value. I’m a huge fan of delivering value. The larger and longer your project or program, the more delivering value is important. That’s because your organization is investing in your project or program. They

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