Copyright © 2009 Russell Pannone – [email protected]. All rights reserved.
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The Truth about Practices and “Being” Agile & Lean
Vince Lombardi, one of, if not the greatest coach in football history, once said, “Practice does
not make perfect. Only perfect practice makes perfect”.
A misnomer is labeling a practice a “best” practice"; a practice is only best in the specific context
in which it exists.
My working definition of “practice” is: A practice is a common and adaptive approach for doing
something with a specific purpose in mind. When we apply a practice we are focused on end and
value-added not the means.
Figure 1.0 depicts candidate practices applicable to “being” agile.
Figure 1.0 - Candidate Practices
When a team is “being” agile, one of the things they will do is self-organize & self-direct around
practices; selecting one or more practice to apply to an iteration/sprint.
The benefits of which are:
Iterative & incremental adoption of “being” agile
Gives team a context and narrow focus to rally around
Provides a non-threatening easy way for team to learn together, “be” agile, apply an
iterative and incremental approach, and get better at what they we do
Copyright © 2009 Russell Pannone – [email protected]. All rights reserved.
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So, let’s take a closer look at two of these practices.
Practice - Mastering the Iteration Figure 2.0, Figure 3.0 and Figure 4.0 depict an iterative and incremental cycle.
Figure 2.0 – William Deming’s Plan, Do, Check/Study, Act –
Quality Improvement Cycle
Figure 3.0
Copyright © 2009 Russell Pannone – [email protected]. All rights reserved.
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Figure 4.0 – Scrum Framework
In all actuality William Deming’s quality improvement cycle of Plan, Do, Check/Study, Act is
embodied in Scrum.
When “being” agile, we work in sprints/iterations developing and delivering commercial or
operational value incrementally. Iterative and incremental is time-specific/activity-based and
product-specific/value-based. The term iteration is time-specific and activity-based while the
term increment is product-specific and value-based.
Being agile and applying iterative and incremental development puts the Product Owner (the
business or customer representative) in the driver’s seat; communicating and collaborating with
the team “what” is to be developed, delivered and deployed, with the Product Backlog serving
as their steering wheel.
This approach also puts the Development Team in the driver’s seat. While the Product Owner is
responsible for “what” is to be developed the development team is self-directing and self-
organizing around “how” to develop the system-software product; with the Iteration/Sprint
Backlog serving as their steering wheel.
Applying an iterative and incremental cycle is all about increasing the feedback loop, reducing
waste, effectively and efficiently responding to change and delivering often, commercial or
operational value.
Copyright © 2009 Russell Pannone – [email protected]. All rights reserved.
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The bottom line: delivering commercial or operational value early and often, giving ourselves
the best opportunity to beat the competition to market, realize revenue and discover insights that
we can use to help us improve.
Practice - Three level planning
Copyright © 2009 Russell Pannone – [email protected]. All rights reserved.
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Copyright © 2009 Russell Pannone – [email protected]. All rights reserved.
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Copyright © 2009 Russell Pannone – [email protected]. All rights reserved.
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Copyright © 2009 Russell Pannone – [email protected]. All rights reserved.
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Bio
Russell Pannone is a systems-software development and delivery practitioner, facilitator, and
coach specializing in collaborative and adaptive product (systems-software) development and
delivery.
Russell’s passion is to help people succeed.
Russell has worked in the systems-software development and delivery industry for over 25 years
in a variety of roles including developer, team leader, object modeler, data modeler, project
manager, scrum master, process engineer, and instructor.
He has led agile/lean product development and delivery projects and worked with clients in a
variety of industries including state and local government, aerospace, mobile banking, insurance,
energy, and telecommunications.
Russell’s mantra is: “Do more listening and less talking while you plan a little, do a little,
check/study value-added and adapt”
Russell can be reached at [email protected]