Agile 2011 Day 1 Review

Agile 2011It was great enthusiasm that I set off to Salt Lake City last month for Agile 2011. In the lead up I was a reviewer on two stages (Testing & Quality Assurance and Working with Customers), plus I was lucky enough (and apparently the only submitter) to have all three of my original submissions accepted (although conference rules, for good reason, restrict speakers to two sessions). Whilst its a been a month since the conference (I took some time afterwards to spend time on both the east and west coast of the USA), I wanted to ensure that I posted my notes.

Here are the notes from the sessions that I attended on day one.

The Product Partnership: Using Structured Conversations to Deliver Value

Mary Gorman and Ellen Gottesdiener led this tutorial. They started by taking about requirements by collaboration and leading a discussion on things that hinder and help.

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Things that hinder: access to the right people, thinking about the solution rather than what needs to be done, multitasking, people not listening, customer not clear of needs, backlog too big, stories too big, missing product owner

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Things that help: centralised repository, short backlog, story maps, clear business goals, UI mockups part of the story, clear priorities, crisp acceptance criteria

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To set the stage we need:

  • a sponsor, product owner / champion, customer, technology
  • a shared understanding of vision, much like an infinity loop we: discover –> prepare –> deliver
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From Agile2011

They then went on to speak about value:

  • conflicting voices for value – not just from the customer but technology value, we need to listen to all the voices
  • evaluate requirements – value, risk (such as technology risk, team risk, outsourcing risk) and dependencies (dependent on other teams or external vendors and requirements and dependencies where value violates the way we would like to build the system)
  • benefit – IRACIS (increase revenue, avoid cost, improve service) needs to be balanced with cost, time and delivery
  • table stakes – the things we must deliver to stay in business
  • differentiators – point of difference in the marketplace
  • up sell revenue potential
  • foundation for long term savings
  • provides revenue for future
  • frequency of use
  • automate labour intensive tasks
  • no viable manual workaround
  • reduces pain for end-users
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This led to a discussion about backlog:

  • we want to build the most valuable things first
  • two states – credible (it has some kind of value) or buildable (it has been prepared and is sliced, groomed or right size as well as understood well enough to estimate, test and document)
  • incorporate UX into preparation, collaborated workshops
  • slice for value – starts with a glean in someone’s eye, then it gets bigger because we have a bunch of options, so we need to fit based on value to contract the list
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And finally onto requirements:

  • product provides value to users – who will receive value from the product
  • what actions need to be performed – what are set options
  • what is the data (noun) and the type and state of data
  • what are the constraints – policies or controls that need to adhered to, business rules

The example for this tutorial was getting to the Agile 2011 conference. We first ask the question: what do we value.

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    • customer value – convenient parking, staying in conference hotel, cheap flights, etc…
    • business value – people stay at conference hotel, one stop shopping on the website to save aggravation for Agile Alliance as well as attendees
    • user roles – travel explorer – individual attendees (speakers, sponsors, volunteers, attendees) and corporate travel agencies for group travel
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    • actions – hotel information, distance to the venue from home, distance from other hotels
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    • data – link to hotel (official hotel plus local hotels), Salt Lake City information
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    • control options – the business rules, such as when you need register by, etc…
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So we start with the requirement:
I need to: register
User role
  Type options: member*, non-member, group, academic
  State options: active*, inactive
From Agile2011

Then the actions:

Action options
  learn
  pay
  confirm
  communicate
  cancel / transfer
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Then the data:

Data: Fee
  Type options: regular, early bird, super early bird
  State options: available, sold out
Data: Payment
  Type options: credit cards, payment order, check
  State options: paid, pending, not paid

We may also visualize this as a data model or a state diagram

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We then need to look at the business rules and prioritise them.

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Once this is complete we can now we slice for value and write a story. This needs to be the silver bullet / tracer bullet, then you can break down from there. At this point you can write the stories and throw the sheets away. This all leads to:

As a... I need... so I (value)

Requirements leads to examples which leads to tests. We can now link this to given when then:

 Given: pre-condition (state), fixed data
 When: action, business rules, input data
 Then: output data, post condition (state)

It is recommend that you come to these workshops with some pre-planning but be under the agreement that they are draft and often wrong. These could be release or iteration planning workshops.

Now the forgotten heroes, the non-functional requirements:

    • design and implementation constraints – the givens, the parts of your technical infrastructure that are dictated or restricted – worth pausing and discussing if there are any options
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    • interfaces – human, other systems and device interfaces such as messages (you could use a context diagram to illustrate this) – with the diagram you can start discussing the options / choices / possibilities
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    • quality attributes – things like speed, stability, uptime, security, scalability, usability, extensibility, etc…, need to be testable and SMART (specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, time-based) – eg. recover from user error in x clicks, x time
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You can do this at the big view (business process, features, MMF, scenarios), pre-view (user stories, user story maps where you lay out stories left to right, scenarios) or the now view (buildable, scenarios). The granularity will change.

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Plans in an array matrix – the anchor is the action dimension

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Need to have a structured conversation to communicate effectively. Face to face is the most effective and get a shared understanding of the highest value.

Overall, this was an enjoyable session. I really liked the templates for mapping out the requirements (despite the fact that these were essentially just aids for the workshop) as they helped focus the conversation and gave our group something to focus on. Mary and Ellen are currently writing a book based around this content, so I look forward to seeing that in the future.

Coaching Success: Getting People to Take Responsibility & Demonstrate Ownership

Christopher Avery (creator of the Leadership Gift and author of The Early Admissions Game: Joining the Elite, which apparently is 10 years old and still in print) led this extremely packed session, the essence is contained in this publication available here (as well as here).

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We started the workshop by competing in a spaghetti challenge (based on the Marshmallow Challenge) which consisted of the materials of just 10 pieces of spaghetti and a  line of tape. The team I was working with constructed a tower of 35 inches, which ended up being the second tallest in the room.

From Agile2011

There is a pattern in our mind that kicks in every time something goes wrong – creates angst and anxiety – responsibility process – a descriptive model:

  • QUIT – the pressure of responsibility and obligation can lead us to quit, an avoidance move, a lack of completion, active disengagement
  • RESPONSIBILITY – call yourself on obligation so you start looking for solutions – start saying “I get to go to this stupid meeting”, means you have a choice – we were taught that doing stuff we have to do makes us responsible
  • OBLIGATION – I have to go to his stupid meeting have to but don’t want to – leads to resentment
  • SHAME – how could I do this, how could I be so stupid – laying blame on self – premise is the problem, you can’t learn
  • JUSTIFY – it was raining, I dropped my keys – story makes it just – “that’s just the way it is around here…”
  • LAY BLAME – who took my keys? – not a solving position of mind
  • DENIAL

3 keys – descriptive model

  • INTENTION – wanting to get something done, get to RESPONSIBILITY around every problem in your life
  • AWARENESS – be aware of which level you are in
  • CONFRONT – ability to face, taking yourself to the edge of your comfort zone, comfort zone = current capability, confront = expanding capability – every person you know was once a stranger

Example coping mechanisms are: learn to live with it, it worked on my machine, they just don’t get it, it’s the vendors fault, it’s too hard, you’ve been here long enough to know that’s not going to happen, murphys law, we did exactly what they asked for, …

We then did a “Be With” exercise, which was essentially sitting knee to knee with the person next to you, in complete silence,  for 30 seconds, to feel the others anxiety. Ultimately, it’s not the other person that makes you feel bad, it is yourself.

Confront is the angst of confronting yourself. If you want to change something you need to poke it, and observe the change.

Accountability Responsibility:

  • accountability is the number one tool of management – it’s the way we manage commitments between two parties – its outside of us because it is us and someone else
  • responsibility is about how we respond – internal to us, and different for all of us
  • what people are signed up for is greater than what they are responsible for
  • what people are responsible for is greater than what they are accountable for <– We want to be here
  • they are both equal

Where’s the bottleneck?

  • what if you had to reproduce the code, if you had the same team and resources?
  • what percentage would be more efficient the second time?
  • modal is 70%. You would be better because you have solved the problem before. Learning takes time. Essence of agility is to learn and take feedback.

There is lots of feedback in agile practices such as retrospectives, showcases, standups, etc… If you are not going to do anything about it, stop investing in the feedback loop. The fastest way to learn is to take ownership.

Fastest way to elevate responsibility in a group is demonstrate it yourself. If you are saying people around you are not displaying responsibility, then you are just laying blame.

Exercise coaching responsibility. The responsibility process only works when it is self applied! You need to teach it so others can self apply it. Counter not being good enough yet to teach this yet:

  1. Give yourself forgiveness, forgive yourself for being human
  2. Teach this with a light tone. Make yourself the brunt of all the jokes that are below the line
  3. Don’t go into agreement (“but I do have to go into that stupid meeting”) – don’t confuse the facts with the mental position – take time, breathe, count 10 seconds and answer – validates they raised a good question and allows you to respond – ask if you can push back on them a little bit, and ask them to identify where they are on the chart
  4. Make sure you support – need to forgive yourself, let go and move onto a better future

Taking responsibility is owning your power and ability to create, choose and attract.

Responsibility is the design space. What do we want from this? Be clear with what you want and be clear about the consequences. Responsibility gives you power but also potential consequences.

There is a difference between choosing something and avoiding something.

As a coach you get to intervene in situations, so you need to act from a position of responsibility and check where you are coming from (move through the model as quick as you can). Ask yourself if your message is clear and does not sound like blame.

Advice is seldom effective so stop giving advice. You are transferring responsibility from them to you. If it doesn’t work they perceive it as being your fault. Instead:

  1. Resist giving advice. Tell me what you have tried, tell me what you haven’t tried
  2. If you must give advice, give three alternatives so they have to choose, putting responsibility on them. “If I were in your shoes I might consider a…, b…, c… What do you think about those?” One coaching company advises 10 alternatives, so you really think about the responsibility.

Finally, play the “Catch Sinner” game to learn the process:

  • make a score card
  • choose a word for today
  • make 2 columns – “get off of it” and “it got out”
  • throughout the day, everytime you catch yourself in a position of “blame” mark your chart
  • 10 points for the left and 1 point for the right column
  • build tremendous awareness for each word at least for one day

There are a bunch of resources at Christopher’s website, in particular he encouraged us to get a copy of the teaching poster and empowered us to teach the process to our peers.

Overall, I really enjoyed this session, as I had heard good reports from this session when it was help in 2009, and this year it was listed as one of the most popular sessions. The responsibility process is something I would really like to work on personally.

The Agile Manifesto 10th Anniversary Reunion: The Big Park Bench

This was one of the highlights of the conference where 15 of the 17 original authors of the Agile Manifesto got together on a big park bench to discuss the writing of the manifesto.

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There were heaps for great stories but here are some of the snippets I took away:

  • started with XP Immersion
  • at the XP Leadership meeting, rejected idea of creating a group
  • Bob Martin and Martin Fowler sketched out an idea for the Lightweight Methods conference
  • Jim Highsmith noted that there us nothing about it that he would change and would not get back together with these people to do it!
  • Ward Cunningham would change the colour balance of the background image
  • Brian Marick noted that individuals and interactions can often be a beat up for people who appreciate tools
  • Jim Highsmith commented when asked about the next 10 years that agilists don’t predict!
  • they never expected that something written in a couple of afternoons would be this big
  • Brian Marick recalled that the stated objective of the meeting was a manifesto and it seemed miraculous that they left with a good framework . Bob Martin was just surprised that he has been to one meeting that worked!
  • Martin Fowler did not want to call it agile, he wanted a wackier name
  • Agile Manifesto nailed it as a baseline – they might have added “we really mean it” or “we are not kidding”!
  • when you gel with a team you get what can be summed up in 3 words: high quality work
  • great teams change people lives. “The manifesto changed our lives, and probably yours too”
  • many people who may have survived under waterfall may not survive much longer under agile, as it is flushing out bad practices
  • other potential names for agile were: adaptive, hummingbird, lean (used already), PPP, a bunch of acronyms, did not want a word they would have to wear pink tights and a tutu to explain!
  • Agile was a coincidence – people following lean in the 1990’s were saying agile is the future, which was good because agile has a meaning in the business world
  • the most argued item on the manifesto – iteration timeframe, executes terminology
  • the principles were harder to arrive at
  • biggest disappointment – everyone wants to be agile but too few people want to do it (when they wrote it they really meant it), the scrumbut
  • biggest success – uses outside of software (for example Pragmatic Programmer publishing), wanted teams to be able work freely in a way they wanted to work
  • need a revolution in middle management and need a similar framework for agility
  • Agile is not the “not-waterfall” – it’s about teams and delivering software
  • Agile stands as a beacon of hope, for it to disappear would mean the evil empire has won
  • in software, we still need to ask how do we do a better job?
  • an Agile process of inspect and adapt is what makes lean companies great
  • Jim Highsmith particularly called out Jeff Smith, the CEO of Suncorp Business Services as being someone who got promoted from CIO to CEO through the success of Agile
  • consider lean inside the same heritage as agile
From Agile2011
From Agile2011
From Agile2011

A reunion site has been setup in conjunction with this event.

Podcast

Finally, I recorded a short audio podcast for The Agile Revolution wrapping up Day 1 of the conference.

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