Everyday Kanban

Discussing Management, Teams, Agile, Lean, Kanban & more

Category: Management (page 23 of 25)

Why improvement initiatives fail

How many times have you heard “We tried that and it was horrible. It just didn’t work for us.”? I hear that a lot. Heck, I have even said that at times in the past regarding ideas for team improvement. Its a very common condition that a company will bring in a consultant to implement a big change initiative that is set to greatly improve a team or company’s performance. Often it is a big, sweeping change such as taking waterfall teams to scrum or some other way of working that really requires a complete shift in how you think about work. Now, if you do these methods like Scrum, XP, etc well and the team is ready for this size change, you can really reap some rewards. However, a good percentage of the time these methods are scrapped and the initiative is abandoned. Why is that?

The answer is that they’ve fallen into the J-Curve and can’t get up. Have you ever heard the phrase “it is going to get worse before it gets better?” Remember the last time a new person joined your team… how there was an initial negative impact on productivity before it got better? That’s exactly what the J-Curve depicts.

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Recommended viewing on continuous delivery

This presentation covers our journey of continuous delivery at my previous employer (12 years worth).

http://summit.atlassian.com/archives/code-and-build/continuous-delivery-across-major-sites

At the time, it was just what it was. But, now that I am in another company at a different stage of growth and maturity, I’m really envious of what we accomplished there. Unfortunately the presentation slides don’t move with the video — rookie move — but its worth the 34:40!

Oh, and its my husband doing the presentation!

My leadership vision and a challenge to you

When I was in a class for new managers at my current employer a few years back, I was challenged to write a leadership vision. For a while, when you’re a new manager, you spend a lot of time getting on your feet and managing, but not that much time leading. There is a difference between the two. It is easy to get caught up in that and fail to make the transition. However, I managed to begin my journey to becoming a leader and created my leadership vision so I wouldn’t be a ship sailing with no navigation. My leadership vision statement is below.

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