Agile 2009 - Agile &amp; Organizational Culture http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/taxonomy/term/23/0 Agile is all about changing your organization. It’s not only about changing the way you think and work. Improving your organization’s agility in a sustainable way may also require changing its underlying values and principles. Change doesn’t come easy. An agile initiative doesn’t take place in a vacuum; it has to interface with the existing (organizational) culture. Both will influence each other as change takes place. This is a process of mutual adaptation, where one possible result is that the agile initiative can fail because the neither the organization nor the agile initiative is sufficiently adaptable. en We Are Naked Volunteers: How an Agile Users Group Rediscovered Itself http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/3123 <p>A splendid way to know if you will succeed at agile in the workplace is to be guided by an agile experience in a volunteer setting, where little is masked. Volunteers became volunteers because, despite jobs, families and everything else in their lives, they see a unique reward from the donation of their time and efforts. The danger of the workplace is that, rather than keeping the eye on the prize, it is too easy for someone to replace the underlying motivational reward by the paycheck. This report shows how a volunteer organization was able to experience and learn the power of agile values.</p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/3123#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Experience report 45 minutes Wed, 04 Mar 2009 00:56:38 +0000 ronmor 3123 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org Growing an Agile Culture from Value Seeds. http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/3043 <p>Values can be powerful forces when applied to a small company. From their seed can come personalized principles and practices. By starting with agile values, and then making them your own, you can instill a creative force for change and adaptation necessary for success. Traditional agile practices become personalized through iterative improvement measured against these values. Different teams can create new practices that are applicable to their discipline. Most important, they frame every conversation and decision, enabling rapid execution and shared vision.</p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/3043#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Experience report agile culture agile values Startup 45 minutes Tue, 03 Mar 2009 21:18:06 +0000 paulingalls 3043 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org Weaponized Scrum http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2844 <p>You championed Agile adoption in your organization. Interest grew as your projects become predictable. You led a group of agilists who helped spread the word to more groups. Life was good. Then senior management took notice of the improvements and decided to mandate adoption of Agile. They’ve skimmed some of the books, but don’t have any practical experience. Your agile adoption has just reached a critical stage as it moves from grass-roots effort to management directive. You’re about to lose control of your baby. You’re about to learn that you’ve created a monster.</p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2844#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Experience report agile team dynamics cautionary tale mistrust pitfalls of agile adoption recovery war stories 45 minutes Tue, 03 Mar 2009 01:25:14 +0000 MikeMarchi 2844 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org Creating a Culture of Trust: An Agile Leadership Tool http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2800 <p>In our business and personal lives, many of us know leaders who foster environments with incredible creativity, innovation, and ideas—while other leaders try but fail. So, how do top leaders get it right? This session explores ways that leaders create cultures of trust that fosters the free flow of ideas. While we can’t make people trust each other, a culture of trust gives empowerment and provides a safe place to explore and discover new and innovative solutions and new ways of implementing and reaching results. It also encourages healthy risk taking to fail early and correct faster.</p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2800#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Workshop Agile Leadership Best Practices Culture of Trust innovation leadership trust 90 minutes Mon, 02 Mar 2009 21:26:46 +0000 ppixton 2800 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org How Agile has changed our Human Resources http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2738 <p>When we adopted agile we were not looking to reinvent our human resource policies, but our organization changed in fundamental ways that we did not predict. Peers routinely provide feedback to each other on performance. Team members schedule their own reviews. Everyone on the team has an opportunity to work with clients. Vacation schedules are submitted without regard to project delivery dates. We have programmers who job share, and mothers bring their infants to work.</p> <p><a href="http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2738">read more</a></p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2738#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Experience report human resources Menlo Menlo Innovations Menlo Software Factory organizational culture Workplace Flexibility 45 minutes Mon, 02 Mar 2009 16:33:31 +0000 cjg3 2738 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org How the FBI learned to catch bad guys one iteration at a time http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2702 <p>Because the FBI never stops evolving, High Performance Technologies, Inc (HPTi) found themselves struggling to keep up with the changes and maintain their CMMI III certification. Developers were complaining, clients were getting anxious, releases were slipping; but what was the problem? Was it CMMI? Was it the environment? Was it HPTi? Through a disciplined approach to agile development, we found the answers to our questions above. When you’re dealing with a client who is historically challenged with a continuously changing environment, you better be on your toes.</p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2702#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Experience report CMMI Contracting engaged clients Government Agile 45 minutes Mon, 02 Mar 2009 03:51:32 +0000 jbabuscio@hpti.com 2702 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org When Team Culture and Company Culture Does Not Mix: Social Deviance http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2622 <p><strong>Summary for Event Guide</strong></p> <p>A high-performing agile team is tight knit. They have worked hard to become a cohesive unit and have developed a bond. This chemistry can be thrown off balance when someone is added to the team in the middle of a project. It does not matter how flexible, capable, or agile savvy the new team member is. If they have not been involved in the care and nurturing of the team’s culture and is not invested in the same way that the other team members are. When the new team member is not flexible, capable or agile savvy, the effect can be devastating.</p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2622#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Talk company culture Scrum structure team 90 minutes Sun, 01 Mar 2009 20:22:50 +0000 mglacey 2622 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org Help me to see... corporate culture http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2450 <p>Changing the way individuals and teams work is one thing. Changing organizational culture is quite another, especially when so many of us (yes, even us at this conference) have little idea that the assumptions we make, the language we use, the structures we are bound by are the direct antithesis of Agile. Our thinking is locked by the patterns of years and needs to be unleashed in order to make inroads towards cultural change. Using a simple yet effective collaboration game from the Improv tradition this session will challenge our assumptions and open up new neural pathways.</p> <p><a href="http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2450">read more</a></p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2450#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Workshop agile culture collective creation Corporate Culture Improv 90 minutes Sat, 28 Feb 2009 12:41:17 +0000 acyment 2450 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org Learning is key to Agile success: Building a learning culture on your Agile team http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2402 <p><em>“Tell me and I&#8217;ll forget; show me and I may remember; involve me and I&#8217;ll understand.”</em> – Chinese Proverb</p> <p>Agile teams that rapidly learn and apply new-found skills become increasingly adept at embracing change and delivering value. Team members feel more fulfilled, motivated and valued. And they have way more fun!</p> <p>In this session you will learn about agile learning! Learn to recognize learning moments and put in place effective learning patterns tuned to your team and context. Learn how to build and sustain an effective learning culture on your agile team.</p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2402#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Talk coaching culture Embrace Change learning patterns 90 minutes Fri, 27 Feb 2009 16:50:34 +0000 dwhelan 2402 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org Agility Night Live - TV Sketches and Project Stories http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2349 <p>A glimpse behind the scenes of the production of a weekly show like Saturday Night Live offers an incredible example of a team of people who have agility in their DNA. Writers, actors, set designers, producers, studio execs, etc. all have a single-minded focus on delivering an exceptional quality show every single week. Slipping the schedule is not an option. Customer satisfaction (viewer ratings) are the central measure of success. The production team must collaborate and adapt to unexpected challenges every single week.</p> <p><a href="http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2349">read more</a></p> http://agile2009.agilealliance.org/node/2349#comments Agile &amp; Organizational Culture Talk agile culture Behaviors complex adaptive system DNA mindset 90 minutes Thu, 26 Feb 2009 23:01:39 +0000 Ken Collier 2349 at http://agile2009.agilealliance.org