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Texas 3 [clear filter]
Monday, August 13
 

9:00am CDT

Distributed Agile Simulated Exercise: Dhaval Panchal, Michael Tardiff
Have you faced challenges working with distributed scaled agile projects? Do you have the means to cope with the problems in this context? Are you curious to discover techniques that could work for your project? In this workshop you will experience scaled and distributed agile project delivery. This session promises to be as interesting and close to your real life experience. This is your chance to experience and experiment in a fail-safe learning environment. You will come away with a variety of tools and techniques that can help better your distributed project delivery.

Speakers
DP

Dhaval Panchal

SolutionsIQ
CSC, CST
avatar for Michael J. Tardiff

Michael J. Tardiff

senior consultant, SolutionsIQ
Seattle sailor, transplanted from the Northeast, who brings passion, perspective, and patience to helping teams and organizations work happily. At the core of my practice is profound respect for people. I appreciate theory but embrace practice, and I love learning more about what... Read More →


Monday August 13, 2012 9:00am - 12:30pm CDT
Texas 3
  Distributed Agile

1:30pm CDT

Agile and the nature of decision making: Dennis Stevens
Organizations are really bad at Risk Management. And the typical approaches to risk management are flawed - resulting in bureaucratic overhead and not much improvement in the performance of software development projects. Agile efforts have rejected bureaucratic and non-value adding efforts and in the process have rejected most of what is practiced as risk management. This is unfortunate - because the nature of agile development fundamentally changes how to benefit from effective risk management. Risk management is about managing uncertainty to reduce the probability and impact of unfortunate events and the maximize the realization of opportunities. This workshop builds on concepts from SEI's MOSAIC project and Eric Reis Lean Start-up to present a practical and proven to a systemic approach to integrating threat and opportunity identification and response into the management of Agile projects. Useful for typical delivery teams, this approach is particularly valuable in the large projects and large organizations.
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/Agile and the Nature of Decision Making.pdf

Speakers
avatar for Dennis Stevens

Dennis Stevens

LeadingAgile



Monday August 13, 2012 1:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Texas 3
  Enterprise Agile
 
Tuesday, August 14
 

1:30pm CDT

Baby Steps and Pervasive Feedback: George Dinwiddie
If you are new to Agile and attempting to transform your organization, it’s easy to get lost in the details of recommended practices and ceremonies. Too many groups try so hard to exactly follow the descriptions "by the book" that they miss the benefits of those practices. They overlook the very reason the practices exist. It’s more important to be effective than to attempt a large number of suggested practices. George Dinwiddie will highlight one way to judge the effectiveness of your practices in a manner that guides you in improving them.
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/Baby Steps and Pervasive Feedback-Agile2012.pdf

Speakers
avatar for George Dinwiddie

George Dinwiddie

Grand Poobah and Jack of All Trades, iDIA Computing, LLC
George Dinwiddie helps organizations develop software more effectively. He brings decades of development experience from electronic hardware and embedded firmware to business information technology. He helps organizations, managers, and teams solve the problems they face by providing... Read More →


Tuesday August 14, 2012 1:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Texas 3
  Agile Boot Camp

3:30pm CDT

Working Effectively with User Stories: Silent Sizing and Definition of Ready: Ken Power
User stories are used to describe the functionality delivered in a product or system. Two common challenges we see recurring, even with experienced teams, are (1) they spend far too much time planning and estimating, getting trapped in the details, and (2) they have difficulty finishing user stories in a time-boxed iteration or Sprint – often realizing, despite the promise of further conversation, that they just didn’t know enough about the user story before taking it on. This hands-on session introduces participants to two techniques to deal with these problems. The first is Silent Grouping, which allows teams to collaboratively size even very large backlogs in minutes. The second is Definition of Ready, which is a set of agreements that lets everyone know when a user story is ready to begin. Combined, these techniques can save your teams literally hundreds of hours in time.
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/Agile 2012 Working Effectively With User Stories.pdf

Speakers
avatar for Ken Power

Ken Power

Software Engineering Leader, https://kenpower.dev/
Ken Power has held multiple positions in large technology organizations. His current responsibilities include leading global, large-scale engineering organization transformations. He has been working with agile and lean methods since 1999. He holds patents in virtualization and network... Read More →



Tuesday August 14, 2012 3:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Texas 3
  Agile Boot Camp
 
Wednesday, August 15
 

9:00am CDT

Affordance-Driven Process Improvement: Designing a Process that Works for Your Team: Michael Keeling, Ariadna Font
The best processes are those that encourage teams to naturally do the right things at the right times. Amazing processes like this don’t happen by accident; they are specifically designed to encourage desirable behavior while discouraging harmful behaviour. By carefully choosing the process’s affordances -- practices or artifacts that direct our thinking toward a specific goal -- a team can tailor a process that makes success intuitive. The session will begin by presenting the core concepts behind affordence-driven process improvement before diving into a collaborative workshop. During the workshop teams will use information from the introduction to brainstorm practices that will help them promote those values, as you would in a team retrospective. Intended Audience * People new to agile who don’t know where to start * High-level executives and managers who want to take an active role in shaping their team’s future * Process improvement professionals who want to explore a new way to look at teams and organizations * All design, Process and team fanatics
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/process-affordances-workshop.pdf

Speakers
avatar for Ariadna Font

Ariadna Font

UX Lead & Development Manager, IBM
I'm the UX Lead at Vivisimo, an IBM Company, building enterprise search software. I have been practicing, introducing and spearheading Agile and UX methods at Vivisimo with the ultimate goal to improve communication, gain shared understanding and increase happiness. I strive to... Read More →
avatar for Michael Keeling

Michael Keeling

Staff Software Engineer, LendingHome
Michael Keeling is a software engineer at LendingHome and the author of Design It!: From Programmer to Software Architect. Prior to LendingHome, he worked at IBM on the Watson Discovery Service. Keeling has a Master of Science in Software Engineering from Carnegie Mellon University and a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science from the College of William and Mary... Read More →


Wednesday August 15, 2012 9:00am - 10:30am CDT
Texas 3

11:00am CDT

Raving Retrospectives -Innovation Games® & other techniques to facilitate creative retros: Kate Megaw, Brian Rabon
Do you find it challenging to keep your retrospectives innovative and creative so you get the maximum feedback from your scrum team? This session will review traditional retrospectives and give you 3 new innovative tools to add to your "tool kit" to help you facilitate creative, fun and engaging retrospectives. No matter what your project, project methodology or delivery model, everyone benefits from feedback on what they could do differently next time. The session will involve a mix of lecture, workshop and discussion. No death by PowerPoint here! This session will look at: 1) What is a retrospective 2) Why do we do retrospectives 3) How to plan a retrospective 4) Traditional retrospectives 5) Creative retrospectives Session attendees will be divided into teams of 6-9 (easily adjustable for audience size) and will do an exercise using one of the following creative retrospective techniques: - The Boat (Innovation Games®) - The Retrospective Starfish - Spiderweb Retrospectives The audience for this presentation is anyone looking for feedback on how their project, implementation or work is going. Whether from a more traditional environment or a more Agile environment there is something in this session for everyone; from beginners with no retrospective experience to experienced coaches wanting to expand their "tool box"! I will use PowerPoint to cover the introduction to retrospectives and why we do them. I will then demonstrate using a white board / flip chart and post it notes some of the traditional retrospective techniques. I will introduce 3 new retrospective techniques and then divide the attendees into groups of 6-9 and have each group try one of the new techniques (easily adjustable for audience size). I will ask them to come up with a topic on which to do a retrospective and I will give them some examples in case they don't have ideas at hand: Agile 2012 Conference Retrospective, iPad 2's, Facebook. After they are done trying their new techniques, we will do a 10 minute debrief with the entire group to discuss why they felt their technique was effective / wasn't effective, what they liked and what they didn't like so that all attendees get feedback on all the techniques.
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/Raving Retrospectives.pdf

Speakers
avatar for Kate Megaw

Kate Megaw

Certified Scrum Trainer & Agile Coach | President, Braintrust Consulting Group
Kate is the President of the Braintrust Consulting Group where she specializes in working with executives and C-level professionals as well as serving as an Agile Coach and Certified Scrum Trainer®. Before co-founding The Braintrust Consulting Group, Kate worked as a Project Manager... Read More →



Wednesday August 15, 2012 11:00am - 12:00pm CDT
Texas 3

1:30pm CDT

Integrating agile with other Enterprise disciplines: Six Sigma, BPM & CM: Jason Tice
As Enterprise-level organizations look to maximize the effectiveness of Information Technology and Software Development activities through adoption of agile techniques, it is common that agile development practices may interact or be impacted by other disciplines already entrenched within the Enterprise. This talk will explore three specific Enterprise disciplines that commonly interact with agile / lean software development: * Enterprise-level Process Improvement Activities driven through Six Sigma Methodologies (DMAIC, DMADV, Kaizen) * Business Process Management (BPM) * Enterprise Configuration Management (CM) For each discipline, recommended integration patterns will be presented to describe how agile development activities can improve the effectiveness of these common Enterprise disciplines. Discussion will also outline recommended services that staff supporting each Enterprise discipline (Six Sigma, BPM & CM) should provide to optimize the software delivery and innovation that can be achieved using agile and lean development techniques. The presentation will also focus on the unique knowledge, skills, abilities, and perspectives that Six Sigma, BPM & CM practitioners have and how often they can integrate with agile development efforts to help teams mitigate specific challenges. Discussion will highlight specific messaging strategies and patterns to ensure effective collaboration between core agile development staff and staff supporting other Enterprise disciplines. Lastly, the presentation will provide messaging strategies to deconflict the core activities of agile development from the core activities of Six Sigma, Business Process Management, and Enterprise Configuration Management. All materials shared during this presentation have been compiled during a 4+ year Enterprise-level change management effort embarked on by a large United Stated Department of Defense organization to adopt agile software development within an Enterprise that was proficient at Six Sigma, BPM and Configuration Management prior to adopting agile.
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/IntegratingAgileDevSixSigmaBPMandCM-Presented.pdf

Speakers

Wednesday August 15, 2012 1:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Texas 3
  Enterprise Agile

3:30pm CDT

Agile FDA Mini- Plays, Mosh Pit Style: Brian Shoemaker, Nancy Van Schooenderwoert
In the FDA-regulated world, resistance to using Agile methods is still strong. We’ve turned several of the typical objections from quality and regulatory managers in the FDA-regulated industry into role-play sessions, both to explain the reason for the objection and to describe how well-managed Agile teams can answer it. By modeling the conversations you may need to have, we help you understand not just the FDA rules, but the thinking behind those rules. Our role play won’t be a “closed shop” – you can jump in too, and get your questions addressed!
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/Shoemaker_VanSchooenderwoert_Agile_FDA_MiniPlays.pdf

Speakers
avatar for Nancy Van Schooenderwoert

Nancy Van Schooenderwoert

President, Lean-Agile Partners, Inc.
Nancy was among the first to apply Agile methods to embedded systems development, as an engineer, manager, and consultant. She has led Agile change initiatives beyond software development in safety-critical, highly regulated industries, and teaches modern Agile approaches like Mob... Read More →
avatar for Brian Shoemaker

Brian Shoemaker

Principal Consultant, ShoeBar Associates
Brian Shoemaker consults for healthcare products companies in computer system validation, software quality assurance, and electronic records and signatures. He has conducted validation both on product software and on internal software, developed software quality systems, audited software... Read More →


Wednesday August 15, 2012 3:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Texas 3
 
Thursday, August 16
 

9:00am CDT

Fixing Broke(n) Governments Through Serious Games: Luke Hohmann
It’s no secret. We’re broke. Local, state and federal governments around the world are all facing budget shortfalls, spending cuts and reduced services. All of us — ordinary citizens, elected officials, civic and community leaders — know that we must make dramatic changes to solve these crises, and yet governments remain gridlocked. How do we move beyond this impasse? How do we create an approach to budgeting that is both participatory and scalable? The answer lies in the serious games pioneered by the Agile Community. In this interactive lecture, participants will learn to conduct in-person and online games built specifically for resolving multi-dimensional budget problems. These games are based on games that have been played for years in the Agile Community. In this session, however, we'll demonstrate that by challenging our own definitions of leadership, we can demonstrate that practices common in many Agile teams can have a massive impact. We will detail the Budget Games played in San Jose, CA, on Jan. 29, 2011 and Jan 21, 2011. In both sessions more than 100 community leaders collaboratively re-crafted the city’s proposed budget. Because the games, which were graciously facilitated pro-bono by many members of the Agile Community, generated actionable consensus, San Jose officials were able to act on the game’s results with more confidence than traditional polling. In the workshop, participants will learn how to run a budget game in their own community and help refine both the in-person and online game prototypes. Brief overview of our process and results from January 2011 (the Jan 2012 games have not been completed): 1. The San Jose Mayor’s office created a list of 18 funding proposals that community leaders could purchase using the basic game structure of the Innovation Game® _Buy a Feature_. The total cost of these items was $14,000,000. The list of items that we used in this game can be found here: [funding proposals](http://innovationgames.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/fundingproposals.pdf). 2. Community leaders organized into groups of between 7 and 9 players, with 8 players / game as the most common configuration. Each player was given $200,000 to purchase items they wanted. This was a very constrained game, and Community leaders quickly determined that they couldn’t buy much. 3. The Mayor’s office created a second list of budget cuts that the Community leaders could select through unanimous agreement to get more money. This list of potential budget cuts we used in this game can be found here: [reduction proposals](http://innovationgames.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/reductionproposals.pdf). 4. The pricing and structure of items on either list cannot be adjusted (this is a standard rule for _Buy a Feature_ games). 5. One Innovation Games® Trained Facilitator and One Innovation Games® Trained Observer managed each group to minimize researcher bias and record key aspects of the negotiations. 6. The game was played for 90 minutes. 7. There was no requirement that any items were purchased or cut. The community leaders were in complete control of their virtual money. 8. We prepared a [final report}(http://innovationgames.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/BidsOnly-Raw-Game-Data.pdf) that allowed City leaders to take action. An even more thorough review of the event results can be found [here](http://innovationgames.com/2011/02/san-jose-ca-community-leaders-budget-games-results/).
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/Agile-2012-Presentation-Hohmann.pdf

Speakers


Thursday August 16, 2012 9:00am - 10:30am CDT
Texas 3
  Leadership

11:00am CDT

Connecting Product Vision to Everyday Agile Work : Kelly Looney
Agile development helps make us more responsive and flexible in building products, but how do we make sure we are building the right product? Unfortunately, simply asking the customer and getting them involved in the effort is usually not enough. Great products surprise customers by addressing needs that customers often cannot articulate. For Product Owners and Agile/Lean team members that want to infuse their projects with a unique product vision capable of disrupting markets and delighting customers. Prioritization becomes clear when the vision is a tool rather than a generic platitude.
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/VisionTool.pdf

Speakers
avatar for Kelly Looney

Kelly Looney

30 year software veteran who has been everything from a developer to CEO. Part of the Smalltalk community prior to the Agile community. Worked with Adele Goldberg, Dick Gabriel,and Kent Beck while at ParcPlace Systems. Kelly has introduced Agile ideas to many organizations moving... Read More →



Thursday August 16, 2012 11:00am - 12:00pm CDT
Texas 3

1:30pm CDT

Journey to Agility: Coaching a Transformation: Skip Angel
How far can you take Agile within an organization? Is it enough to just focus on Agile team practices like Scrum and XP or is something more needed? Agile is much more than a selection of an SDLC methodology for your teams. It can become a larger organizational change for more agility beyond just product development. The speaker will provide you with an approach that has worked with larger transformations with real life examples of how he has taken companies with little or no knowledge of Agile to an organization with high agility.
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/BigVisible - Journey to Agility Agile 2012.pdf

Speakers
avatar for Skip Angel

Skip Angel

Chief Pathfinder, CA Technologies
I have over 25 years of experience in software development in a variety of roles such as Developer, Project Manager, Consultant and Chief Technology Officer. Over the last 7 years, I have provided thought leadership, training and coaching to new and experienced teams interested in... Read More →



Thursday August 16, 2012 1:30pm - 3:00pm CDT
Texas 3

3:30pm CDT

Adopting CMMI® into Your Scrum Methodology: Susan Strain, Lee McKinney
To some, the combination of Capability Maturity Model-Integration (CMMI®) and Scrum is akin to the mixture of oil and water. We will alleviate some of the concerns that participants may have when CMMI® is introduced into a Scrum environment. At a high level, attendees will be able to crosswalk their Agile/Scrum artifacts to satisfy evidentiary requirements for a Maturity Level 2 Standard CMMI® Appraisal Method for Process Improvement (SCAMPI A). Then they will learn how to tie up the loose ends with other standard project management artifacts. The end result will be a fully-populated Scrum/CMMI® alignment matrix.
http://submit2012.agilealliance.org/files/session_pdfs/Geocent Scrum CMMI (without animations).pdf


Thursday August 16, 2012 3:30pm - 5:00pm CDT
Texas 3
  Enterprise Agile
 
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