location_city Melbourne schedule Jul 30th 04:45 - 05:30 PM AEST place EN101 L100 people 49 Interested

Agile was coined in 2001, building on techniques and methods from the prior 10 or more years. We know that (smaller) software projects are more successful with agile delivery methods than with staged approaches like the SDLC. So why is it that 18 years after a better was was identified that managers struggle to adopt agile in a meaningful way.

This is a facilitated discussion - there are as many answers as there are people! So with the late afternoon timeslot - let's get together and have an interactive chat - with the intent that we all leave with some useful ideas, tools and techniques that we can apply when we get back to the office ...

 
 

Outline/Structure of the Talk

  • Background and Introduction 5 m
  • Typical challenges met and overcome (stories) 5 m
  • Group discussion on key typical challenges 10 m
  • Framing the problem 5 minutes
  • Refocusing the group discussion on techniques and tools 10m
  • Questions 5m

Learning Outcome

Attendees will leave the session with ideas, stories and practical tools they can apply to build empathy for management as well as ways to work to bring managers on the agile journey.

Target Audience

Leaders, Program Managers and Project managers, Coaches

Prerequisites for Attendees

Experience in working with management teams

Video


schedule Submitted 4 years ago

  • Alex Sloley
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    Alex Sloley - The End is Nigh! Signs of Transformation Apocalypse

    45 Mins
    Talk
    Advanced

    How can an Agile Coach figure out when an Agile “Transformation” is going wrong? Are there signs that they might see, heed, and take action upon? Of course, there are!

    Hindsight is 20/20, but in the moment, these warning signs can be hard to see. Let’s explore some of the more common, and frightening, warning signs that your Agile “Transformation” might be exhibiting. We will discuss transformation provider types, frameworks, keywords, and other anti-patterns that might be signs that THE END IS NIGH.

    This session will review common themes and help familiarize you with the warning signs. Armed with this new knowledge, you will be able to plan as appropriate, to help navigate your organization through potential impending doom.

  • Sue Hogg
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    Sue Hogg - Context is king! A systems thinking approach to further understand your company context...

    Sue Hogg
    Sue Hogg
    Group Program Manager
    carsales.com.au
    schedule 4 years ago
    Sold Out!
    45 Mins
    Talk
    Beginner

    Ever wondered what on earth is going in your company? Your team? The system of work? Are people acting crae-crae? Is there conflict? Are there pockets of super awesomeness & pockets of unhappiness? Are people pulling in different directions?

    In this talk, I will run through my systems thinking approach and experiences to unpacking and diagnosing a company, it’s context, it’s practices and it’s people.

    If nothing else, this talk may help you with making the invisible more visible and may lead you to be even more situationally aware of the context you have found yourself in!

  • Simon Bristow
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    Simon Bristow - A framework for strategic agility

    45 Mins
    Talk
    Intermediate

    In today's world, if businesses aren’t more agile in the way they execute on their strategies, they risk over investing on initiatives that won’t result in the future growth they seek.

    In this talk, we will discuss and share stories from organisations driving towards holistic business agility, and present a simple framework that can help organisations better check the performance of future growth strategies, and act earlier when it looks like those strategies are not going to turn up.

  • Nish Mahanty
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    Nish Mahanty - Moving from a monolith to a distributed monolith - a cautionary tale on adopting microservices

    Nish Mahanty
    Nish Mahanty
    Director of Engineering
    REA Group
    schedule 4 years ago
    Sold Out!
    30 Mins
    Talk
    Intermediate

    This talk is a case study of our architectural evolution over the last 2 years.

    Our start-up had licensed a customised warehouse management system in order to demonstrate our innovative new business model. The WMS had a traditional 3-tier architecture based on Java and SQL server, and was lightning fast with most of the business logic encapuslated in stored procedures.

    Out our start-up we needed to be able to "test and learn" - ie rapidly develop and deploy new features and test them in the market with our customers. Based on the feedback we would identify tweaks to the business model, and fine-tune the functionality that our customers wanted.

    We had a launch date 5 months in future, a need to scale rapidly, growing the team from 2 devs to 20 within 8 weeks. And we needed to be able to work in parallel on multiple features. Whilst ensuring that the application was secure, performant, and reliable.

    The answer, according to a bunch of experts, was to adopt microservices.

    Three years later, we have a suite of secure, scalable, and resilient applications running in AWS. We deploy to Production multiple times a day, and our MTTR is less than 30 minutes.

    And we have Services. Some of them are "micro".

    But reflecting on what we learned in that period, there are a lot of things that we wished we had done differently.

    In this talk I'll walk you through the evolution of our architecture, explain some of the choices, and highlight what we learned, and discuss what we would do differently if faced with the same decisions today.

    This case study talks about the last 9 months of our start-up where we went from “no team, and limited functionality” – to launching a successful and thriving business backed by completely custom trading platform and fulfilment engine.

  • Mark Grebler
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    Mark Grebler - Designing a DevOps Dependency Diagram to Decide Development Direction

    45 Mins
    Case Study
    Beginner

    So you walk into a new company, get the lay of the land and then realise, crap! Their development processes are like they were design by a bunch of first-year uni students doing a group project.

    There is no DevOps to speak of. There are snowflake servers everywhere. Their git branching strategy is unmanageable. They run tests only every 3 or 4 releases. Their deployment is manual and different for each release. The have no real alerting.

    Ok. Take a deep breath! Calm down.

    So much to do, but where to start? The business has produced a list of improvement actions, but those actions are focussed around fixing the symptoms of the problems, not solving the root cause. The business does not understand that the path to DevOps improvement is complex and each task has many inter-relations and dependencies.

    This is the problem that I faced about a year ago. To overcome this, we went through a process of defining all of the DevOps tasks we could think of and mapped them into a dependency diagram. This diagram was useful to communicate both internal and external to the team.

    In this case study, I’ll go through the process to design the dependency diagram, but also our progress through the diagram one year later.

  • Rick Giner
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    Rick Giner - Increase your profits by a factor of four: the compelling business case for Inclusive Design

    30 Mins
    Talk
    Beginner

    We've all heard that digital Accessibility is the right thing to do. We probably all know it's a legal requirement. But does it really make business sense to put in the effort to become compliant? In this presentation Rick will explore and challenge some of the common justifications for avoiding the requirement - and look at how we can in fact make a very compelling case for building products with Inclusive Design and Accessibility in mind.

  • Justin Holland
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    Justin Holland - Cultivating quiet: The death of the need to always DO (Working Title)

    Justin Holland
    Justin Holland
    Senior Business Analyst
    Xero
    schedule 4 years ago
    Sold Out!
    30 Mins
    Interactive
    Beginner

    I wrote this blog a short while ago: https://medium.com/@justin.holland/cultivating-quiet-38cec9466feb

    I feel like there are other continuous improvement addicts, or perennial impostor syndrome sufferers that feel the compulsive need to be more than they are, and do more in order to reach that unattainable perfect state of being...

    And I know that a bunch of us find ourselves in a state of constant information processing & overload... thanks to the infinite information we are exposed to every day.

    I have also come to believe this can be super unhealthy, and that there is something fundamental that we are losing, thanks to our perpetual busyness.

    Some come and have a little chat, and reflect, about the role of not doing... and instead... being... (quietly)

  • Daniel Prager
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    Daniel Prager / Andi Herman - When at first they don't want to change: Shared lessons from Addiction Therapy and Agile Coaching

    45 Mins
    Talk
    Intermediate

    The easy case for coaching looks something like this: a prospective coachee wants to change, can articulate their goals, and is matched up with a suitably experienced and competent coach, the two are a good fit, and they quickly get down to the challenging yet rewarding business of growth and change.

    But what if a person (or team) doesn't want to change and would rather not be coached? And despite this an external power deems that change is needed and that coaching will bring this change about. What's a coach to do? What about the coachee(s)? What about the role of the client who's engaged the coach?

    This situation is not uncommon, and bears more that a passing resemblance to what often goes on in addiction treatment. A person with a drug addiction (and often other problems) doesn't necessarily welcome therapeutic intervention at the outset. But an external authority has ordered it.

    In this session we will explore the parallels between the two modalities of addiction therapy and coaching, including the applicability of the Transtheoretical Model of Change and the related technique of Motivational Interviewing.

    These approaches offer insights into how to flex and adapt your coaching approach in the face of some of the most common human impediments to change.

  • James Holmes
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    James Holmes - "Agile Software Development actually involves writing software," and other shocking facts.

    30 Mins
    Interactive
    Beginner
    This presentation will focus on the some principles that have been largely ignored in the way we teach agility to people:
    • "Working software is the primary measure of progress."
    • "Continuous attention to technical excellence and good design enhances agility."
    • "Simplicity--the art of maximizing the amount of work not done--is essential."
    We'll cover these by bringing Extreme Programming (XP) up-to-date. We'll also go over software design principles and practices that help, including:
    • loose coupling and tight cohesion
    • declarative programming
    Expect to see actual code running on an actual computer at some point.
  • Kelsey van Haaster
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    Kelsey van Haaster / Robin Doherty - How not to make the news - Build security into your Agile project from the ground up.

    90 Mins
    Workshop
    Intermediate

    When a group of stakeholders and team members come together to plan a new product or feature, they often focus on identifying stories that deliver end user value through solving a business problem, delighting the customer or disrupting a competitor. While these are critical stories, they are not the whole picture. Every product has non-functional or cross-functional stories which must be played.

    Security stories are an important part of these but are often not considered at all. When they are considered, they are often an afterthought or are assumed to be part of the project infrastructure. Trying to bolt on security as an afterthought in this way is a mistake that can lead to disaster at one extreme, and compromises to reduce product usability or don't support good end-user security practices at the other.

    The challenge, of course, is that from the stakeholder perspective, security is not seen as a priority. This workshop is for software delivery teams who want to learn how to change this perspective and work with their stakeholders to help them to understand more about the importance of security. The goal is to help technical and non-technical stakeholders understand security and why it should be given priority and built into their product from the ground up. We show participants how to facilitate a structured meeting or workshop with their stakeholders where they use a simplified threat modelling technique to identify risks. The outcome is the identification of user stories (or evil user stories) which when played will mitigate identified risks.

  • Alexis Stuart
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    Alexis Stuart / Bob Martin - What Aren't You Seeing in Your Product Organisation? Lesson's Learned on Myer's Digital Journey

    45 Mins
    Case Study
    Intermediate

    At Myer, we’re well into our digital product journey. Although we still have plenty of work to do, we would like to start sharing our experiences in taking a Product centric approach to ensure we are delighting our customers and leveraging L.A.S.T practices to change behaviour and enable a positive outcome.

    In this discussion, we will look at where we started, where we are now, and what our future path might look like. Our hope is that we can help others avoid (or at least identify) some of the more common pitfalls, and to help others develop a proactive approach to navigating their digital product journey.

    Some topics for discussion may include:
    - How we are working on creating a Product-centric organisation, and why this is so important.
    - How focusing on the work that feeds the backlog(s) is just as important as the backlog(s) them self.
    - Experimenting with the Google '20% time' practice, and how this helps create a trusting and inclusive environment.
    - Constantly questioning the value of ideas, and initiatives. Like many organisations, there is no shortage of great ideas, but how do we make sure we are working on the most valuable ​at any given time?
    - What happens without a strong product organisation? For example, what happens when there is no product guidance for UX. Now that we are working on building out our Product practices - how can we ​start to develop a healthy tension between UX and Product?

    Experiences shared by Alexis Stuart, Digital Product Owner and Bob Martin, Agile Practice Lead.

  • 45 Mins
    Workshop
    Advanced

    Mindfulness is such a buzz word at the moment. I will talk about what it really is and explore practical techniques that help to make us more proactive and better at responding rather than simply reacting to our experiences in everyday life. It is a simple way of becoming ‘present in every moment’ to face circumstances openly and directly. This presentation can help you with:

    • Understanding your stress triggers.

    • Making plans and organising ahead to cope with daily pressure effectively.

    • Learning 3 mindfulness techniques you can walk away with.

  • Ben Dechrai
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    Ben Dechrai - Why You Shouldn't Care About Security

    Ben Dechrai
    Ben Dechrai
    Developer Evangelist
    Auth0
    schedule 4 years ago
    Sold Out!
    45 Mins
    Talk
    Beginner

    API development is fun! Everyone is doing it, from large organisations wanting to provide developer access to their systems, to small websites wanting to push web application business logic to the browser.

    Password security is boring. It's also harder than you'd think. The number of reported system breaches is on the increase, with big names being hit by hackers.

    And when it comes to a service-oriented architecture, you have to secure multiple services. That's just tedious.

    There are a number of solutions, but few that let you pretty much forget about security and access control.

    In this talk and demo, Ben will show how using a third-party identity management system will allow you to ramp up your prototypes and MVPs with more ease, and to concentrate on the core purpose of the APIs, rather than the layers of security that are a must in today's digital world.

  • Gabor Devenyi
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    Gabor Devenyi / Jayavalli Vadrevu - Agile in Action - Build a Paper City

    90 Mins
    Workshop
    Beginner

    This is a practical workshop where the participants will work in two sprints to build a city using the material given to them.

    The intention of this workshop is for people to understand all the ceremonies better and it also helps teams understand that collaboration and working together as a team is the best way to achieve the results.

    This is going to be a very interactive workshop while teams get to learn Agile while having fun.

  • Mark Pearl
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    Mark Pearl - What we've learned around teaching/mentoring graduates to become software developers

    Mark Pearl
    Mark Pearl
    Engineering Protege Manager
    MYOB
    schedule 4 years ago
    Sold Out!
    45 Mins
    Case Study
    Intermediate

    At MYOB we've been improving our graduate programme for software developers. Today I would like to share some of the insights we've gained over the last few years around how to do this better.

  • 30 Mins
    Talk
    Beginner

    In this talk Ruma and Jay will share seven habits of highly effective teams, based on their work at Envato. They'll also share some tips to help build the habits.

  • Neil Killick
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    Neil Killick - Slicing heuristics - Techniques for improving value generation, speed to market and delivery predictability

    60 Mins
    Interactive
    Advanced

    Story (or, more accurately, capability) slicing is such a core and necessary practice for creating agility at team, portfolio and even organisational level. Yet it is not explicitly included in any of the popular methods and frameworks teams use such as XP, Scrum and Kanban.

    Slicing heuristics are collaborative, contextual, evolving techniques for creating focus on value-generating activities, leading to delivering value sooner and with more predictability. They incorporate all of the 4 core agile values from the manifesto, and many of the 12 principles, particularly:

    • continuous improvement (inspect and adapt),
    • maximising the amount of work not done (simplicity and focus)
    • face-to-face conversations
    • continuous delivery of value

    Best results are obtained if heuristics are applied for all types of work, by all of the folks collaboratively across the value chain, but they can be used as safe-to-fail experiments by individuals and groups wherever they sit in the product delivery pipeline.

    From a practical perspective, they involve:

    • slicing deliverables at all levels, not only "story"
    • flow metrics (cycle times and variation)
    • specific inspect and adapt / continuous improvement activities to improve speed-to-market and predictability
    • big visible boards (ideally)

    Come and learn about this powerful, practical approach to improving agility in your team or organisation from wherever you sit right now.

  • Timothy Newbold
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    Timothy Newbold - Why Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) is one of the worst kept secrets to organisational success

    90 Mins
    Workshop
    Intermediate

    Hearing a lot about Objectives & Key Results (OKRs), but still a little unclear what they're about? Maybe you're hearing all the chatter and it's tweaking your interest! Well, join me for a farside chat and all will be revealed.

    In this session we'll get under the hood of OKRs to understand the history, the core concepts and cut our teeth in a manner which allows us to take them back to our teams for further exploration.

    At minimum, you'll walk out of the session with some clear goals for the coming quarter!

     

    Do we know our stuff?
    OKR Quickstart coaches and consults businesses on how to create strategic clarity, achieve audacious goals and build high performing teams. We've helped hundreds of people and businesses introduce OKR so that everyone finds crazy value out of them (not just the exec team). We've made every mistake in the book and this session summarises some of our biggest learnings!

  • Chris Lewis
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    Chris Lewis - The Human Side of a Security Incident

    30 Mins
    Talk
    Beginner

    What could it be like to work through a real-life security incident at your company? As awareness about security in our industry improves, we hear much about how to keep our applications secure, but rarely do we consider what happens with your employees when something goes wrong. Allow me to share my story about the emotional highs and lows of working through a security incident, as we look past its technical surface and into the human experience behind it instead.

  • Renee Troughton
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    Renee Troughton - Agile Consulting with the big end of town

    Renee Troughton
    Renee Troughton
    Enterprise Agile Coach
    BCG
    schedule 3 years ago
    Sold Out!
    30 Mins
    Talk
    Beginner

    Prepare for a contentious and deeply personal story.

    I was an Enterprise Agile Coach. I am now a Consultant. But can I be both?

    Discover why I made the leap to "the other side", what I have learnt in the process and why, if we don't do something soon, Agile in Australia risks imploding.

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