Episode 106: Turning the Agile Ship Around with David Marquet

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DavidMarquetTony, Renee, Craig and special guest host Tyson Nutt catchup with David Marquet, author of “Turn The Ship Around!” and the “Turn Your Ship Around” companion workbook at the Agile Australia conference and talk about how similar a nuclear submarine and an Agile team really are:

  • leadership is not about telling people what to do and how to do it
  • all investments in human beings are long term
  • the approach spread from the bottom up, now the book is on the official reading list of two Navy’s (including New Zealand)
  • “I intend to” does not mean they get to do it – gives psychological ownership and to spark the conversation
  • thinking out loud is about saying what is going on in our head, this even works when teaching your children how to drive!
  • feed the beast – don’t respond by hiding, feed them with as…

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Atlassian Bamboo 5.11 Delivers Continuous Integration At Scale

InfoQAtlassian, makers of development tools such as JIRA and Confluence, have just released version 5.11 of their continuous delivery tool Bamboo with a host of new features to help teams scale and collaborate. The key feature in this new release is the ability to scale from 100 to 250 elastic build agents.

Source: Atlassian Bamboo 5.11 Delivers Continuous Integration At Scale

The Secrets to Leading Virtual or Dispersed Agile Teams

AgileBrisbaneAt the April 2016 Agile Brisbane meetup, we were lucky to have Korrine Jones present on Leading Virtual Teams. Korrine is the author of “Virtual Team Reality: The Secrets to Leading Successful Virtual Teams and Remote Workers“.

Check out her slides for the full summary of her talk, but here are my notes from the talk:

  • distance does not make a huge difference once you are not co-located – whether a floor away or across the world
  • challenges – time zones, culture, accountability, multiple competing stakeholders, latency in communication, availability and willingness, no body language

Korrine Korr

  • Albert Mehrabian principle – to interpret meaning it comes from 7% words, 38% tome and 55% non verbals – which explains why we have so much breakdown in virtual communication, on the phone the breakdown is 8% words and 82% tone
  • success factors – top notch leadership, clear goals, periodic face to face, frequent communications, attention to cultural differences, maximised communication quality
  • a virtual leader needs to amp up the skillet of a good leader – communication, listening, open dialogue, goals, team dynamics, culturally sensitive, results focussed, handle conflict
  • need to develop a shared team vision
  • develop a social contract – ask what are the values, then to get around understand and cultural differences ask them to explain what that will look like
  • fave to face inductions for new starters has a better chance for success
  • high clarity processes, the team performance grows as the dispersion grows
  • select people who are self starters, tech savvy, autonomous, actively reach out to collaborate
  • manage by outcomes not activity (as you can’t see them) – so need to agree the objectives, collectively make a plan, collectively monitor performance
  • GROW coaching model works well for remote workers, ask them what the goal is, what’s happening now, where are you at, what could you do, what do you need from me
  • build one on one relationships – regular deliberate contact, focus on those most remote, have purely social conversations to build connection
  • swift trust – trust that builds easily, SES has this because they know others have training, but one breakdown in conversation this breaks down
  • need to move from swift trust to real trust – do you know the needs and expectations that you team needs from you and you need from them, these need to me be met for trust, it’s a simple conversation we often don’t have, you may need to lead the conversation for others to reciprocate
  • virtual meeting – need to amp up how you chair, what are the protocols (eg mute when not speaking, raise hands, etc)
  • virtual celebrations – have lunch or celebrations at each end
  • have a ritual or something at the start of a call – a fun example is 2 truths and a lie or a list of words that can be snuck into a conversation
  • consider the richness of your tools

Korrine alluded to these YouTube videos on virtual meetings, worth a watch!

 

Episode 104: Agile Australia 2015 Vox Pop #2

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Agile-Australia-2015-LogoCraig and Tony wander the lunchtime floor on day 2 of Agile Australia conference in Sydney, looking for more interesting people in the Australian Agile community. They chatted to the ones who couldn’t quite run fast enough away from the microphone including:

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Episode 103: Agile Australia 2015 Vox Pop

The Agile Revolution's avatarThe Agile Revolution Podcast

Agile-Australia-2015-LogoCraig and Tony are once again roaming the floor, this time at the Agile Australia conference in Sydney, looking for interesting people in the Australian Agile community. While walking around the floor they run into:

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