Food for Agile Thought #228: Asking Good Questions, Product Catastrophes, Agile’s Cognitive Science, Trade-offs & Debts
Food for Agile Thought #228: Asking Good Questions, Product Catastrophes, Agile’s Cognitive Science, Trade-offs & Debts

Food for Agile Thought #228: Asking Good Questions, Product Catastrophes, Agile’s Cognitive Science, Trade-offs & Debts

TL; DR: Asking Good Questions, Trade-offs & Debts — Food for Agile Thought #228

Welcome to the 228th edition of the Food for Agile Thought newsletter, shared with 25,103 peers. This week, we delve into asking good questions, thus overcoming assumptions; we learn more about the cognitive science behind ‘Agile,’ and we cautiously check SAFe again.

We gain insight into how to handle product failures catastrophes; we reflect whether trade-offs are worth the costs. Also, we come back to defining what a product is, focusing on its two critical elements.

Lastly, we appreciate an excursion into psychological safety — from its origins to pioneering its application.

Did you miss last week’s Food for Agile Thought’s issue #226?


?? The Tip of the Week


Stefano Mastrogiacomo (via Strategyzer): The Art of Asking Good Questions with The Language Compass

Stefano Mastrogiacomo points at the importance of making fewer assumptions but focusing on facts and shares the Language Compass canvas for download.

The Language Compass helps avoid escalations by suggesting a set of neutral questions that help inquire and understand the first-order realities (facts) hidden behind unproductive second-order statements (assumptions).

Source: Strategyzer: The Art of Asking Good Questions with The Language Compass

Author: Stefano Mastrogiacomo


Agile & Scrum


Christiaan Verwijs (via Scrum.org): Thinking By Sprinting: What Cognitive Science Tells Us About Why Scrum Works

Christiaan Verwijs argues that our cognitive abilities are limited, which is why empirical approaches are likely to outperform analytical plans such as ‘waterfall.’

Source: Scrum.org: Thinking By Sprinting: What Cognitive Science Tells Us About Why Scrum Works

Author: Christiaan Verwijs


Joost Minnaar (via Corporate Rebels): Psychological Safety: How Pioneers Create Engaged Workforces

Joost Minnaar delves into the psychological safety — from history to practical examples of organizations where ‘failure’ is an option.

Source: Corporate Rebels: Psychological Safety: How Pioneers Create Engaged Workforces

Author: Joost Minnaar


?? (via InfoQ): Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe): Bloated Bureaucracy or an Enabler for Business Agility?

Almudena Rodriguez Pardo takes a closer look at various scaling frameworks and defines what SAFe is and what it is not, and why SAFe is dividing the agile community.

Source: InfoQ: ?? Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe): Bloated Bureaucracy or an Enabler for Business Agility?


?? Professional Scrum Master Training PSM II — Berlin, March 24–25, 2020

This advanced Scrum Master training (PSM II) by Berlin Product People is a 2-day official Scrum.org class for advanced Scrum Masters, including the industry-acknowledged PSM II certification. This PSM training class will be offered in English. You can book your seat directly.

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Learn more:?? Professional Scrum Master Training PSM II — Berlin, March 24–25, 2020.

Looking for a different date?Back to the training schedule for the Advanced Scrum Master Training (PSM II).


Product & Lean


Joe Leech: Product catastrophe: The top four scenarios and how to deal with them

Joe Leech shares the most common product failure situations, the symptoms, causes, and what to do to both before and after it goes wrong.

Source: Product catastrophe: The top four scenarios and how to deal with them

Author: Joe Leech


Janna Bastow (via ProdPad): Decisions, Debt, and other Dilemmas

Janna Bastow reflects on making trade-offs, which often also means taking on tech debt, design debt, and other types of debt.

Source: ProdPad: Decisions, Debt, and other Dilemmas

Author: Janna Bastow


The Travel Chica: Define a Product

Stephanie Ockerman points at the two critical things that help you define your product: ‘Done’ and customer value.

Source: Define a Product

Author: The Travel Chica


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?? 31+2 Product Owner Anti-Patterns

If you are working as a Product Owner, there is — very likely — room for improvement. This list of some of the most common Product Owner anti-patterns might be a starting point.

Read moreProduct Owner Anti-Patterns — 31+2 Ways to Improve as a PO.


??? Last Week’s Food for Agile Thought Edition

Read moreFood for Agile Thought #227: Agile Core Beliefs, Psychology of Feature Adoption, Agile Coaching Competencies, Design’s Unsexy Middle Bits.


?? Join 1,900-plus Agile Peers on Youtube

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Food for Agile Thought #228: Asking Good Questions, Product Catastrophes, Agile’s Cognitive Science, Trade-offs & Debts was first published on Age-of-Product.com.

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