I suppose the alternative questions, without the need to name check the Villa, could be 'Are you a Birmingham City supporter?' and 'Would you ever consider becoming a Birmingham City supporter?' Affirmative answers to either would automatically rule the candidate out.
Quote from: mr underhill on February 23, 2016, 09:19:13 AMI suppose the alternative questions, without the need to name check the Villa, could be 'Are you a Birmingham City supporter?' and 'Would you ever consider becoming a Birmingham City supporter?' Affirmative answers to either would automatically rule the candidate out.Just check for skinless knuckles.
I don't know much about lean, but - talking of Toyota originated systems - we have what we call "an evolving agile environment" in our place.So, we talk loads about agile and scrum, and some of it, we do - stand ups, backlog planning, sprints - but so much of it is totally impractical in our place that it becomes really unrecognisable as scrum. It's just a pick and mix of stuff we can and can't do.I had to go on a certified scrum master training course before christmas (all management have to - despite us never having to function as scrum masters). Within the first hour, the trainer started telling us how, if we didn't have our product owner embedded with the team full time, it just wasn't ever going to work as it "isn't scrum". I asked her what the fuck we're meant to do if that can't ever happen within our structure (at our place, it can't) and the answer was to just keep on asking people until it did happen. Marvellous.I'm pretty sure that at our place the efficiency savings which we make through our bastardised version of scrum are all spunked away in the time we waste talking about scrum / debating whether we're ever going to be agile / evangelising scrum to others in the company.The easiest way for consultants to improve things at our place would be to come in with AK-47s and a helpful member of staff pointing out the colleagues we could do without.
Quote from: pauliewalnuts on February 22, 2016, 10:56:49 PMI don't know much about lean, but - talking of Toyota originated systems - we have what we call "an evolving agile environment" in our place.So, we talk loads about agile and scrum, and some of it, we do - stand ups, backlog planning, sprints - but so much of it is totally impractical in our place that it becomes really unrecognisable as scrum. It's just a pick and mix of stuff we can and can't do.I had to go on a certified scrum master training course before christmas (all management have to - despite us never having to function as scrum masters). Within the first hour, the trainer started telling us how, if we didn't have our product owner embedded with the team full time, it just wasn't ever going to work as it "isn't scrum". I asked her what the fuck we're meant to do if that can't ever happen within our structure (at our place, it can't) and the answer was to just keep on asking people until it did happen. Marvellous.I'm pretty sure that at our place the efficiency savings which we make through our bastardised version of scrum are all spunked away in the time we waste talking about scrum / debating whether we're ever going to be agile / evangelising scrum to others in the company.The easiest way for consultants to improve things at our place would be to come in with AK-47s and a helpful member of staff pointing out the colleagues we could do without.Oh God, that sounds depressingly familiar.I've worked on 3 agile projects, one worked very well, one was a bit half-assed but achieved something, and one was a total disaster. It really is all about the product owner.The only advantage bad scrum has over waterfall is that you realise your project is doomed a lot quicker.
I think the theory is all fine. The problems start when you begin to try to put it into action.Today I tried to get a product owner (a game producer) at our place to agree to come to a half-day backlog planning session this week. "I'm not spending 4 hours in a room listening to dev shit".*sigh*And what makes it worse is that I kind of see his point. I don't want to be there either. In fact, I won't, because I don't need to be, but getting people to buy in to the amount of time you lose to following 'good practice' is a huge problem for us.Sprint planning, sprint reviews, backlog planning, it all saps a lot of time.
Decent article, sums everything up nicely but nothing we haven't heard before... Apologies if posted elsewhere.http://www.theguardian.com/football/in-bed-with-maradona/2016/feb/25/aston-villa-relegation-premier-league-championship