I just came across some interesting research on motivation.
Apparently it is more effective to ask yourself “Will I succeed” than to say to yourself “I will succeed”.
Will I apply that lesson next time I want to achieve something important?
Posted by James King on May 29, 2010
I just came across some interesting research on motivation.
Apparently it is more effective to ask yourself “Will I succeed” than to say to yourself “I will succeed”.
Will I apply that lesson next time I want to achieve something important?
Posted in Capability growth, Observations, Reflection | Leave a Comment »
Posted by James King on April 5, 2010
We set up a stand at the recent Software Development Conference to run the Agile Release Planning Game I designed.
It seemed to go down really well, so I have decided to make the game available publicly if anyone is interested in using it.
In the game, participants are a group of scientists and engineers who are stuck on Mars after a “less than successful” landing. They are on a mission to make scientific discoveries but must now rebuild a basic infrastructure for survival before returning to their original mission.
Participants then create a strategy based on rebuilding their ship, building a base and/or returning to their basic goal of research. In doing so they must make trade-offs between quality and velocity.
The game introduces concepts such as release planning, iteration planning, velocity, release planning trade-offs, building by feature and adaptive planning.
The game is designed to be led by a facilitator, but can be run without one. The release planning game takes around half an hour to play and can be replayed multiple times to explore different concepts in more detail or to improve the outcome based on lessons learned in the first attempt.
Different options allow the game to be played as a very simple introduction to the concepts of release planning or a more complex game involving more realistic trade-offs and decision making under conditions of uncertainty and pressure.
In addition, there is an extension included in the game that focuses on planning within the iteration (or sprint) rather than across the wider release.
Let me know if you are interested in learning more, or even trying the game for yourself.
Posted in Capability growth, Decisions, Events, Games, Products, Risk | 6 Comments »
Posted by James King on January 17, 2010
I am working with a client who has a whole continent full of different “tribes”, all of whom are going agile and all of whom have huge change agendas on at the moment.
So I am working on a change management plan to help the organisation roll out consistent approaches to IT development and to demonstrate continued improvement in speed and quality across multiple development teams for multiple internal and external clients (the tribes I mentioned).
I think I have a cunning plan but it will be interesting to see how it plays out in reality. Rather than rolling out a structured change program I am recommending we let all the cowboys run wild and do whatever change they want.
Then instead of driving change, the central group responsible will define the rules for experiments so that:
Doing this will help our central team focus on some core activities which we can also treat as experiments. It will also allow individual tribes to move at a pace (and in a direction) that suits them rather than waiting for us to catch up. Of course it might also lead to chaos, lack of focus and inertia.
Give me a call in a month or so (or add a comment here) if you want to learn how it turns out. Or give me a call now if you think you know how it will turn out and want to warn me.
Posted in Capability growth, Implementation | 1 Comment »
Posted by James King on September 12, 2009
Rather than just rolling out various changes and reflecting on how they went, we want to continuously grow our teams and our own capability as well.
I am happy to work with you to develop a capability in any of the areas I work in. This can be as simple as sharing the techniques I use or as sophisticated as planning and implementing an initiative across your whole team to build specific capabilities over the longer term.
I am particularly passionate about integrating the different aspects of capability growth. These include setting up internal mentoring, reading, training, coaching and process improvement. I believe these should be implemented as a cohesive ecosystem that creates the capability of the team, rather than as separate and unrelated undertakings.
In some cases it might also be worth looking at the rollout of elearning, performing a formal skills gap analysis or even getting the team certified. While I do not have the capacity to cover the full gambit of this work on my own, I do work with partners who do.
To find out more about these services, you can browse the articles in the Capability growth category.
You can also call me on +61 4 21 058 459, or email me at james@kingsinsight.com
Posted in Capability growth | Leave a Comment »