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E-raamat: People Over Process: Leadership for Agility

  • Formaat: 290 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Sep-2019
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781000682908
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  • Formaat: 290 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Sep-2019
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9781000682908

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This book is about improving and sustaining agility by focusing on people over process, as the first agile value advocates, and is the third and final book in the author's Lean and Agile Software trilogy. The first – A Tale of Two Systems: Lean and Agile Software Development for Business Leaders – describes what agile is and why we do it. The second – A Tale of Two Transformations: Bringing Lean and Agile Software Development to Life – guides leaders in transforming their organizations to adopt this approach. All three books mix description and elaboration of theory with practical demonstration in fictional companies and projects.

This new, third book – People over Process: Leadership for Agility – presents a model of facilitative leadership for agility, which informs the entire book. It begins by describing the roots of the agile movement, which motivates the centrality of people and the need for leadership. The leadership model is then presented, very simply: rigor, alignment, efficiency, through frameworks. Leadership is considered for all team members, and then for the special case of the responsibilities of leaders in formal positions of organizational authority.

With this strong background presented, the book proceeds to describe and demonstrate common and highly useful frameworks for agility. The fictional Pacifica Bank is introduced, and we see the Pacifica team work through architecture, project planning, team structure, governance, scrum meeting, and ultimately retrospectives, using frameworks that have been presented. An Appendix summarizes the most useful frameworks for future reference. Throughout the book concepts are illustrated with vignettes from my experience (in the didactic sections) and with the Pacifica fictional case study.

The key benefits of the book are to make everyone involved in agile work more effective and fulfilled. Essentially, since agile was first introduced almost two decades ago, the primary focus in practice has been on process. The "scrum" methodology was developed and promulgated, and has been widely adopted. This has been on balance broadly positive, but as an industry we have progressed to the point where following the steps of a methodology, particularly one that seeks to implement concepts where the first value is "People over Process," has reached its limits.

The reader of this book:

• Gains a powerful, simple model of leadership that enables the "People" in "People over Process;"

• Sees these principles in action in a fictional company, making agile leadership understandable and engaging;

• Improves their ability to participate in and lead agility;

• Learns extraordinarily useful "frameworks" that help in the most important activities in agile software.

In short, the reader will be better at delivering valuable software solutions, more valuable to their organizations, and more fulfilled in their work.

SECTION 1 Introduction to Facilitative Leadership for Agility
Chapter 1
Pacifica: "Its Not Agile If There Is No Software!"
Chapter 2 Background: The
Facilitative Leader for Agility
Chapter 3 Background: The Organizational
Leader for Agility
Chapter 4 Pacifica: Marys Diagnosis
Chapter 5 Background:
Extraordinarily Well-Prepared and Conducted Meetings
Chapter 6 Pacifica: The
Course Correction Meeting SECTION 2 Three Major Frameworks (Architecture,
Plan, Team Structure)
Chapter 7 Background: Architecture for Agility
Chapter
8 Pacifica: The Architecture Simulation Meeting
Chapter 9 Background: Project
Planning
Chapter 10 Pacifica: The Project Planning Meeting
Chapter 11
Background: Agile Team Configuration
Chapter 12 Pacifica: The Team
Configuration Meeting SECTION 3 Background / Pacifica: Routine Meetings
Chapter 13 The Daily Scrum
Chapter 14 Meeting or Systems Analysis?
Chapter 15
Demos
Chapter 16 Governance Meetings
Chapter 17 Teleconferences SECTION 4
Project Retrospectives
Chapter 18 Background: Retrospectives
Chapter 19
Pacifica: Project Retrospective
Michael K. Levine brings together compelling insights on lean and agile software development, creative writing and teaching, and decades of practical successful application as a senior manager in leading financial and software companies.



Michaels career has primarily focused on how to profit through the application of information technology. He was educated at Carleton College and Princeton University. His early career was not directly in technology first he did international trade negotiation at the US Commerce Department and then joined First Bank System as a corporate banker. In both positions he drifted towards software and in 1990 he joined Norwest Bank and began his full-time technology career. Michael progressed through strategy, project management, CTO, and divisional CIO roles, adopting agile techniques before they were so named. He fully embraced lean and agile concepts as they were popularized helping build and transform teams, and delivering value time after time.



Michaels engagement with modern lean and agile development began at Wells Fargo, where after succeeding in one area with agile concepts he became responsible for a major portion of an enormous and challenged project that did not use these techniques. He then led technology and process engineering throughout the mortgage crisis, rapidly building teams and frantically deploying technology to help struggling borrowers, investors, and the bank. In 2011 Michael joined US Bank where he initially led a program to deploy a new branch banking system (bringing lean and agile to a highly structured waterfall environment) before returning to the mortgage industry as the technology lead for US Bank Home Mortgage in 2013, and now leading all consumer lending and business banking technology.



Michael shared his insights in two well-received books on lean and agile software development from Productivity Press. The first is Tale of Two Systems: Lean and Agile Software Development for Business Leaders, emerging from his frustration with unnecessary and expensive project failures and his desire to help avoid such failures in the future. His second book is Tale of Two Transformations: Bringing Lean and Agile Software Development to Life, which focuses on how to change an organization to use the approaches he illuminated in his first. Michaels trilogy is now completed with People over Process: Leadership for Agility, which guides readers in honoring the first Agile principle to create and sustain agility.



Michael lives in St. Paul, Minnesota, with his lovely wife Holly Lindsay, who has been patient as Michael spent hours in the basement writing.



Website: TheTalesofAgility.com