Food For Thought #90: Agile OKRs, Agile Ladder, 11 Laws of Product, Disruption à la Amazon

Food For Thought #90: Agile OKRs, Agile Ladder, 11 Laws of Product, Disruption à la Amazon

Age of Product’s Food for Thought of May 7th, 2017 deals with various aspects of change: metaphors, agile OKRs, thirsty plants, and misconceptions. Moreover, we wholeheartedly support Tanner’s idea of actively doing nothing as a scrum master.

On the product side, we start with another round of anti-patterns in product development. Then we switch to how to do it right, and we end with why you should not confuse alignment with an agreement.

Lastly: We understand the magic of disruptive innovation disguised as toys and appealing to the inner child.

Agile OKRs & Scrum



Lynne Cazaly: Where’s your project on the path of change

Another great visualization by Lynne Cazaly: the ‘ladder’ metaphor for (agile) change and transformation project.

Source: Where’s your project on the path of change

Author: Lynne Cazaly



Dan North: Applying OKRs

Dan North shares his learning from exploring ‘objectives and key results’ with several organizations, from a few hundred people in size to a couple of thousand.

Source: Applying OKRs

Author: Dan North



John Yorke: Why don’t developers water the plants?

John Yorke thinks there are zones of diminishing responsibility that reduce the effectiveness of self-organized teams.

Source: Why don’t developers water the plants?

Author: John Yorke



Simon Powers: The 6 Misconceptions of Agile Coaching & How to Overcome Them

Simon Powers believes that Agile coaching is in a muddle, and he tries to de-muddle it by pointing at six common misunderstandings.

Source: The 6 Misconceptions of Agile Coaching & How to Overcome Them

Author: Simon Powers



Tanner Wortham: Mastering the Art of Actively Doing Nothing

Tanner Wortham explains why he believes that scrum masters should learn the art of actively doing nothing.

Source: Mastering the Art of Actively Doing Nothing

Author: Rob Wortham




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Product & Lean



Jeff Patton: Backlog Grooming Bugs Me

Jeff Patton shares a rant on product backlog refinement meetings, believing those are often the most unproductive and painful ones in Scrum.

Source: Backlog Grooming Bugs Me

Author: Jeff Patton



Sean Johnson (via Hackernoon): 11 Essential Laws of Product Development

Sean Johnson provides a short, yet seemingly battle-proven guide on product development.

Source: Hacker Noon: 11 Essential Laws of Product Development

Author: Sean Johnson



Tim Herbig: Alignment doesn’t need Agreement

Tim Herbig praises Jeff Bezos’ “disagree and commit” phrase when it comes to not confusing alignment with an agreement.

Source: Alignment doesn’t need Agreement

Author: Tim Herbig



John Cutler (via Medium): Why We Write Tickets

A comprehensive reminder — Slack-style — by John Cutler on why we create tickets. I would add creating a shared understanding, though.

Source: Medium: Why We Write Tickets

Author: John Cutler



Sebastian Radics: Costs of Delay combined with How to measure anything

Sebastian Radics shares a slide-deck on costs of delay including an exercise to apply the quantitative cost of delay matrix.

Source: Costs of Delay combined with How to measure anything

Author: Sebastian Radics


The Essential Read



Howard Yu (via Forbes): How Amazon Stays More Agile Than Most Startups

Howard Yu, professor of strategy and innovation at IMD, on groundbreaking innovations starting as toys.

Source: Forbes: How Amazon Stays More Agile Than Most Startups

Author: Howard Yu


Do you want to read more like this? Well:

Food for Thought #90 was first published on Age of Product.


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