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Archive for December, 2008

The Secret to Organizational Agility

December 8th, 2008

Mike Cottmeyer wrote an excellent article about the importance of eliminating dependencies in agile projects:
http://www.leadingagile.com/2008/12/secret-to-organizational-agility.html

How many times have the following been true:

  • “Many teams are trying to sprint through product development using a traditional MRD or PRD.”
  • “Many teams are working with traditional project managers who are doing their best to be agile, but have been trained to manage dependencies and tell people what to do.”
  • “Teams are trying to be agile with tightly coupled software architectures, insufficient test coverage, legacy code bases, and unable to do a daily build.”

Removing dependencies is a key step that can be taken towards a truly agile development environment.

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Be careful with your online brand…

December 8th, 2008

As the popularity of Web 2.0 is growing, so is the ability for others to observe and evaluate your story and your personal online brand.  This article from JASE marketing reports that a “survey of 500 top colleges found that 10 percent of admissions officers said they look at MySpace and Facebook to evaluate applicants.”

I’ve always lived by two golden rules with regards to blogging:
1) Blog only something you would wish to see printed and cited at any time in the future.
2) Do not edit or update a blog assuming that a printed/archived/cached copy of the original does not exist.

It’s a general faux pas to update a blog post for any reason.  The web is alive with caches and indexes so the chances are that the original is still out there for people to compare.  Spelling errors are generally ok, but if the content of an article is to be updated it is good form to list at Updated: [description of update] at the top or bottom of the post.  If an opinion is being revised, be clear about why there is a change in stance.  Comments are a great way to revise an opinion after learning new information as it allows readers to see the thought processes and perhaps benefit from the same line of thinking that provoked your own turn around.

Web 2.0 means we are all ultra-connected.  This can be great not only for staying in touch with friends but also for business networking and establishing a reputation and a brand in the online world.  However, remember that this “permanent record” can go both ways: and this one is for the world to see.

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