Lean & AgileEnterprise Frameworks
For Managing Large U.S. Gov’tCloud Computing Projects
Dr. David F. Rico, PMP, CSEP, ACP, CSM, SAFeTwitter: @dr_david_f_rico
Website: http://www.davidfrico.comLinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/davidfrico
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/david.f.rico.9Agile Capabilities: http://davidfrico.com/rico-capability-agile.pdf
Agile Resources: http://www.davidfrico.com/daves-agile-resources.htmAgile Cheat Sheet: http://davidfrico.com/key-agile-theories-ideas-and-principles.pdf
Author BACKGROUND Gov’t contractor with 32+ years of IT experience B.S. Comp. Sci., M.S. Soft. Eng., & D.M. Info. Sys. Large gov’t projects in U.S., Far/Mid-East, & Europe
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Career systems & software engineering methodologist Lean-Agile, Six Sigma, CMMI, ISO 9001, DoD 5000NASA, USAF, Navy, Army, DISA, & DARPA projects Published seven books & numerous journal articles Intn’l keynote speaker, 100+ talks to 11,000 people Adjunct at GWU, UMBC, UMUC, Argosy, & NDMU Specializes in metrics, models, & cost engineeringCloud Computing, SOA, Web Services, FOSS, etc.
Lean & Agile FRAMEWORK? Frame-work (frām'wûrk') A support structure, skeletal
enclosure, or scaffolding platform; Hypothetical model A multi-tiered framework for using lean & agile methods
at the organization, program, and project levels An approach embracing values and principles of lean
thinking, product development flow, & agile methods Adaptable framework for collaboration, prioritizing
work, iterative development, & responding to change Tools for agile scaling, rigorous and disciplined planning
& architecture, and a sharp focus on product quality Maximizes BUSINESS VALUE of organizations, programs,
& projects with lean-agile values, principles, & practicesLeffingwell, D. (2011). Agile software requirements: Lean requirements practices for teams, programs, and the enterprise. Boston, MA: Pearson Education.
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How do Lean & Agile INTERSECT?
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Agile is naturally lean and based on small batches Agile directly supports six principles of lean thinking Agile may be converted to a continuous flow system
Womack, J. P., & Jones, D. T. (1996). Lean thinking: Banish waste and create wealth in your corporation. New York, NY: Free Press.Reinertsen, D. G. (2009). The principles of product development flow: Second generation lean product development. New York, NY: Celeritas.Reagan, R. B., & Rico, D. F. (2010). Lean and agile acquisition and systems engineering: A paradigm whose time has come. DoD AT&L Magazine, 39(6).
Economic View
Decentralization
Fast Feedback
Control Cadence& Small Batches
Manage Queues/Exploit Variability
WIP Constraints& Kanban
Flow PrinciplesAgile Values
CustomerCollaboration
EmpoweredTeams
IterativeDelivery
Respondingto Change
Lean Pillars
Respectfor People
ContinuousImprovement
Customer Value
Relationships
Customer Pull
Continuous Flow
Perfection
Value Stream
Lean Principles Customer relationships, satisfaction, trust, and loyalty Team authority, empowerment, and resources Team identification, cohesion, and communication
Lean & Agile Practices
Product vision, mission, needs, and capabilities Product scope, constraints, and business value Product objectives, specifications, and performance As is policies, processes, procedures, and instructions To be business processes, flowcharts, and swim lanes Initial workflow analysis, metrication, and optimization Batch size, work in process, and artifact size constraints Cadence, queue size, buffers, slack, and bottlenecks Workflow, test, integration, and deployment automation Roadmaps, releases, iterations, and product priorities Epics, themes, feature sets, features, and user stories Product demonstrations, feedback, and new backlogs Refactor, test driven design, and continuous integration Standups, retrospectives, and process improvements Organization, project, and process adaptability/flexibility
Basic SCRUM Framework
Schwaber, K., & Beedle, M. (2001). Agile software development with scrum. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Created by Jeff Sutherland at Easel in 1993 Product backlog comprised of needed features Sprint-to-sprint, iterative, adaptive emergent model
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Basic SCRUM-XP Hybrid
Augustine, S. (2008). Certified scrum master training: Not just how, buy why. Herndon, VA: LitheSpeed.
Created by Sanjiv Augustine of Lithespeed in 2008 Release planning used to create product backlog Extends Scrum beyond Sprint-to-sprint planning
Initial Planning Sprint Cycle
Discovery Session
Agile Training Project Discovery Process Discovery Team Discovery Initial Backlog
Release Planning
Business Case Desired Backlog Hi-Level Estimates Prioritize Backlog Finalize Backlog
Product Backlog
Prioritized Requirements
Sprint Planning
Set Sprint Capacity Identify Tasks Estimate Tasks
Sprint Review
Present Backlog Items Record Feedback Adjust Backlog
Daily Scrum
Completed Backlog Items Planned Backlog Items Impediments to Progress
Sprint Backlog
List of Technical Tasks Assigned to a Sprint
Potentially Shippable Product
Working Operational Software
Sprint
Select Tasks and Create Tests Create Simple Designs Code and Test Software Units Perform Integration Testing Maintain Daily Burndown Chart Update Sprint Backlog
Sprint Retrospective
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Layton, M. C., & Maurer, R. (2011). Agile project management for dummies. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Publishing.
Created by Mark Layton at PlatinumEdge in 2012 Mix of new product development, XP, and Scrum Simple codification of common XP-Scrum hybrid
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Simplified AGILE PROJECT MGT F/W
Agile ENTERPRISE FRAMEWORKS
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Dozens of Agile project management models emerged Many stem from principles of Extreme Programming All include product, project, & team management
Schwaber, K. (2007). The enterprise and scrum. Redmond, WA: Microsoft Press.Leffingwell, D. (2007). Scaling software agility: Best practices for large enterprises. Boston, MA: Pearson Education.Larman, C., & Vodde, B. (2008). Scaling lean and agile development: Thinking and organizational tools for large-scale scrum. Boston, MA: Addison-Wesley.Ambler, S. W., & Lines, M. (2012). Disciplined agile delivery: A practitioner's guide to agile software delivery in the enterprise. Boston, MA: Pearson Education.Thompson, K. (2013). cPrime’s R.A.G.E. is unleashed: Agile leaders rejoice! Retrieved March 28, 2014, from http://www.cprime.com/tag/agile-governance
eScrum- 2007 -
SAFe- 2007 -
LeSS- 2007 -
DaD- 2012 -
RAGE- 2013 -
Product Mgt
Program Mgt
Project Mgt
Process Mgt
Business Mgt
Market Mgt
Strategic Mgt
Portfolio Mgt
Program Mgt
Team Mgt
Quality Mgt
Delivery Mgt
Business Mgt
Portfolio Mgt
Product Mgt
Area Mgt
Sprint Mgt
Release Mgt
Business Mgt
Portfolio Mgt
Inception
Construction
Iterations
Transition
Business
Governance
Portfolio
Program
Project
Delivery
Enterprise Scrum (ESCRUM)
Schwaber, K. (2007). The enterprise and scrum. Redmond, WA: Microsoft Press.
Created by Ken Schwaber of Scrum Alliance in 2007 Application of Scrum at any place in the enterprise Basic Scrum with extensive backlog grooming
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Scaled Agile Framework (SAFE) Created by Dean Leffingwell of Rally in 2007 Knowledge to scale agile practices to enterprise Hybrid of Kanban, XP release planning, and Scrum
10Leffingwell, D. (2007). Scaling software agility: Best practices for large enterprises. Boston, MA: Pearson Education.
Large Scale Scrum (LESS) Created by Craig Larman of Valtech in 2008 Scrum for larger projects of 500 to 1,500 people Model to nest product owners, backlogs, and teams
11Larman, C., & Vodde, B. (2008). Scaling lean and agile development: Thinking and organizational tools for large-scale scrum. Boston, MA: Addison-Wesley.
Product OwnerProduct Backlog AreaProduct Owner
AreaProduct Backlog
SprintBacklog
Daily Scrum15 minutes
Product Backlog Refinement5 - 10% of Sprint
2 - 4 Week Sprint
1 DayFeature Team +Scrum Master
Sprint Planning II2 - 4 hours
SprintPlanning I2 - 4 hours
Potentially ShippableProduct Increment
SprintReview
JointSprint
Review
Sprint Retrospective
Disciplined Agile Delivery (DAD) Created by Scott Ambler of IBM in 2012 People, learning-centric hybrid agile IT delivery Scrum mapping to a model-driven RUP framework
12Ambler, S. W., & Lines, M. (2012). Disciplined agile delivery: A practitioner's guide to agile software delivery in the enterprise. Boston, MA: Pearson Education.
Recipes for Agile Governance (RAGE) Created by Kevin Thompson of cPrime in 2013 Agile governance model for large Scrum projects Traditional-agile hybrid of portfolio-project planning
13Thompson, K. (2013). cPrime’s R.A.G.E. is unleashed: Agile leaders rejoice! Retrieved March 28, 2014, from http://www.cprime.com/tag/agile-governance
Agile Enterprise F/W COMPARISON Numerous lean-agile enterprise frameworks emerging eScrum & LeSS were 1st (but SAFe & DaD dominate) SAFe is the most widely-used (with ample resources)
14Rico, D. F. (2014). Scaled agile framework (SAFe) comparison. Retrieved June 4, 2014 from http://davidfrico.com/safe-comparison.xls
Factor eScrum SAFe LeSS DaD RAGESimple
Well-Defined Web Portal
Books Measurable
Results Training & Cert
Consultants Tools
Popularity International Fortune 500 Government Lean-Kanban
SAFe REVISITED Proven, public well-defined F/W for scaling Lean-Agile Synchronizes alignment, collaboration, and deliveries Quality, execution, alignment, & transparency focus
15Leffingwell, D. (2014). Scaled agile framework (SAFe). Retrieved June 2, 2014 from http://www.scaledagileframework.com
Portfolio
Team
Program
SAFe—Scaling at PORTFOLIO Level Vision, central strategy, and decentralized control Investment themes, Kanban, and objective metrics Value delivery via epics, streams, and release trains
16Leffingwell, D. (2007). Scaling software agility: Best practices for large enterprises. Boston, MA: Pearson Education.
AGILE PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT● Decentralized decision making● Demand-based continuous flow● Lightweight epic business cases● Decentralized rolling wave planning● Objective measures & milestones● Agile estimating and planning
Strategy InvestmentFunding
Governance ProgramManagement
SAFe—Scaling at PROGRAM Level Product and release management team-of-team Common mission, backlog, estimates, and sprints Value delivery via program-level epics and features
17Leffingwell, D. (2007). Scaling software agility: Best practices for large enterprises. Boston, MA: Pearson Education.
AGILE RELEASE TRAINS● Driven by vision and roadmap● Lean, economic prioritization● Frequent, quality deliveries● Fast customer feedback● Fixed, reliable cadence● Regular inspect & adapt CI
Alignment Collaboration
Synchronization ValueDelivery
SAFe—Scaling at TEAM Level Empowered, self-organizing cross-functional teams Hybrid of Scrum PM & XP technical best practices Value delivery via empowerment, quality, and CI
18Leffingwell, D. (2007). Scaling software agility: Best practices for large enterprises. Boston, MA: Pearson Education.
AGILE CODE QUALITY● Pair development● Emergent design● Test-first● Refactoring● Continuous integration● Collective ownership
ProductQuality
CustomerSatisfaction
Predictability Speed
SAFe BENEFITS
19Leffingwell, D. (2014). Scaled agile framework (SAFe) case studies. Denver, CO: Leffingwell, LLC.Rico, D. F. (2014). Scaled agile framework (SAFe) benefits. Retrieved June 2, 2014, from http://davidfrico.com/safe-benefits.txt
Cycle time and quality are most notable improvement Productivity on par with Scrum at 10X above normal Data shows SAFe scales to teams of 1,000+ people
Benefit Nokia SEI Telstra BMCTrade
StationDiscount
TireValpak Mitchell
John Deere
Spotify Comcast Average
App Maps Trading DW IT Trading Retail Market Insurance Agricult. Cable PoS
Weeks 95.3 2 52 52 52 52 51
People 520 400 75 300 100 90 300 800 150 120 286
Teams 66 30 9 10 10 9 60 80 15 12 30
Satis 25% 29% 15% 23%
Costs 50% 10% 30%
Product 2000% 25% 10% 678%
Quality 95% 44% 50% 50% 60%
Cycle 600% 600% 300% 50% 300% 370%
ROI 2500% 200% 1350%
Morale 43% 63% 10% 39%
SAFe CASE STUDIES
Most U.S. Fortune 500 companies adopting SAFe Goal to integrate enterprise, portfolios, and systems Capital One going through end-to-end SAFe adoption
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John Deere Spotify Comcast• Agricultural automation
• 800 developers on 80 teams
• Rolled out SAFe in one year
• Transitioned to open spaces
• Field issue resolution up 42%
• Quality improvement up 50%
• Warranty expense down 50%
• Time to production down 20%
• Time to market down 20%
• Job engagement up 10%
• Television cable/DVR boxes
• Embedded & server-side
• 150 developers on 15 teams
• Cycle time - 12 to 4 months
• Support 11 million+ DVRs
• Design features vs. layers
• Releases delivered on-time
• 100% capabilities delivered
• 95% requirements delivered
• Fully automated sprint tests
• GUI-based point of sale sys
• Switched from CMMI to SAFe
• 120 developers on 12 teams
• QA to new feature focus
• Used Rally adoption model
• 10% productivity improvement
• 10% cost of quality reduction
• 200% improved defect density
• Production defects down 50%
• Value vs. compliance focus
Leffingwell, D. (2014). Scaled agile framework (SAFe) case studies. Denver, CO: Leffingwell, LLC.Rico, D. F. (2014). Scaled agile framework (SAFe) benefits. Retrieved June 2, 2014, from http://davidfrico.com/safe-benefits.txt
SAFe SUMMARY Lean-agile frameworks & tools emerging in droves Focus on scaling agility to enterprises & portfolios SAFe emerging as the clear international leader
21Rico, D. F. (2014). Dave's Notes: For Scaling with SAFe, DaD, LeSS, RAGE, ScrumPLoP, Enterprise Scrum, etc. Retrieved March 28, 2014 from http://davidfrico.com
SAFe is extremely well-defined in books and InternetSAFe has ample training, certification, consulting, etc.SAFe leads to increased productivity and qualitySAFe is scalable to teams of up to 1,000+ developersSAFe is preferred agile approach of Global 500 firmsSAFe is agile choice for public sector IT acquisitionsSAFe cases and performance data rapidly emerging
Dave’s PROFESSIONAL CAPABILITIES
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SoftwareQuality
Mgt.
TechnicalProject
Mgt.
SoftwareDevelopment
Methods
OrganizationChange
SystemsEngineering
CostEstimating
GovernmentContracting
GovernmentAcquisitions
LeanKanban
Big Data,Cloud, NoSQL
WorkflowAutomation
Metrics,Models, & SPC
SixSigma
BPR, IDEF0,& DoDAF
DoD 5000,TRA, & SRA
PSP, TSP, &Code Reviews
CMMI &ISO 9001
InnovationManagement
Statistics, CFA,EFA, & SEM
ResearchMethods
EvolutionaryDesign
Valuation — Cost-Benefit Analysis, B/CR, ROI, NPV, BEP, Real Options, etc.
Lean-Agile — Scrum, SAFe, Continuous Integration & Delivery, DevOps, etc.
STRENGTHS – Data Mining Gathering & Reporting Performance Data Strategic Planning Executive & Manage-ment Briefs Brownbags & Webinars White Papers Tiger-Teams Short-Fuse Tasking Audits & Reviews Etc.
● Action-oriented. Do first (talk about it later).● Data-mining/analysis. Collect facts (then report findings).● Simplification. Communicating complex ideas (in simple terms).● Git-r-done. Prefer short, high-priority tasks (vs. long bureaucratic projects).● Team player. Consensus-oriented collaboration (vs. top-down autocratic control).
PMP, CSEP,ACP, CSM,
& SAFE
32 YEARSIN IT
INDUSTRY
Books on ROI of SW METHODS Guides to software methods for business leaders Communicates the business value of IT approaches Rosetta stones to unlocking ROI of software methods
http://davidfrico.com/agile-book.htm (Description) http://davidfrico.com/roi-book.htm (Description)
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Backup Slides
Agile for EMBEDDED SYSTEMS 1st-generation systems used hardwired logic 2nd-generation systems used PROMS & FPGAs 3rd-generation systems use APP. SW & COTS HW
25Pries, K. H., & Quigley, J. M. (2010). Scrum project management. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.Pries, K. H., & Quigley, J. M. (2009). Project management of complex and embedded systems. Boca Raton, FL: Auerbach Publications.Thomke, S. (2003). Experimentation matters: Unlocking the potential of new technologies for innovation. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.
● Short Lead● Least Cost● Lowest Risk● 90% Software● COTS Hardware● Early, Iterative Dev.● Continuous V&V
● Moderate Lead● Moderate Cost● Moderate Risk● 50% Hardware● COTS Components● Midpoint Testing● “Some” Early V&V
● Long Lead● Highest Cost● Highest Risk● 90% Hardware● Custom Hardware● Linear, Staged Dev.● Late Big-Bang I&T
AGILE“Software Model”- MOST FLEXIBLE -
NEO-TRADITIONAL“FPGA Model”
- MALLEABLE -
TRADITIONAL“Hardwired Model”
- LEAST FLEXIBLE -
GOAL – SHIFT FROM LATE HARDWARE TO EARLIER SOFTWARE SOLUTION
RISKEmbeddedSystemsMore HWThan SW
STOPCompeting
With HW
STARTCompeting
With SW
Iter
atio
ns, I
nteg
rati
ons,
& V
alid
atio
ns
SAFe rapidly evolving & adapting to market needs A “draft” version was made for “systems engineering” SoS, Lean, Kanban, and continuous flow system focus
26Leffingwell, D. (2014). Scaled agile framework (SAFe). Retrieved April 8, 2015 from http://www.scaledagileframework.com
Agile for SYSTEMS ENGINEERING
SoS
System
Sub-Sys
27Kovacs, K. (2015). Comparison of nosql databases. Retrieved on January 9, 2015, from http://kkovacs.euSahai, S. (2013). Nosql database comparison chart. Retrieved on January 9, 2015, from http://www.infoivy.comDB-Engines (2014). System properties comparison of nosql databases. Retrieved on January 9, 2015, from http://db-engines.com
Rank Database Year Creator Firm Goal Model Lang I/F Focus Example User Rate KPro
2007 Steve Francia
10gen Gener-ality
Document C++ BSON Large-scale Web Apps
CRM Expedia 45% 48
2008 Avinash Lakshman
Facebook Relia-bility
Wide Column
Java CQL Fault-tolerant Data Stores
Mission Critical Data
iTunes 20% 15
2009 Salvatore Sanfilippo
Pivotal Speed Key Value C Binary Real-time Messaging
Instant Messaging
Twitter 20% 14
2007 Mike Carafella
Powerset Scale Wide Column
Java REST Petabyte-size Data Stores
Image Repository
Ebay 10% 8
2004 Shay Banon
Compass Search Document Java REST Full-text Search
Information Portals
Wiki-media 5% 7
Real-time, Distributed, Multi-tenant, Document-based, Schema-free, Persistence, Availability, etc.
8
Redis10
HBase14
Rapid-prototyping, Queries, Indexes, Replication, Availability, Load-balancing, Auto-Sharding, etc.
Distributed, Scalable, Performance, Durable, Caching, Operations, Transactions, Consistency
Real-time, Memory-cached, Performance, Persistence, Replication, Data structures, Age-off, etc.
Scalable, Performance, Data-replication, Flexible, Consistency, Auto-sharding, Metrics, etc.
16Elastic Search
MongoDB5
Cassandra
3 - $10M•Gen App•Reliable•Low Cplx
2 - $100M•Schema•Dist P2P•Med Cplx
1 - $1B•Limited•Sin PoF•High Cplx
Agile Scaling w/CLOUD COMPUTING 1st-generation systems used HPCs & Hadoop 2nd-generation systems used COTS HW & P2P 3rd-generation systems use APP. SW & COTS HW
AWS is most popular cloud computing platform Scalable service with end-to-end security & privacy AWS is compliant & certified to 30+ indiv. S&P stds.
28Barr, J. (2014). AWS achieves DoD provisional authorization. Retrieved January 12, 2015, from http://aws.amazon.comDignan, L. (2014). Amazon web services lands DoD security authorization. Retrieved January 12, 2015, from http://www.zdnet.comAmazon.com (2015). AWS govcloud earns DoD CSM Levsl 3-5 provisional authorization. Retrieved January 12, 2015, from http://aws.amazon.com
Analytics DatabaseSSAE
CrossService
Compute &NetworkingSO
C
ApplicationServices
Deployment &Management
Storage &Content Del.
DoD CSM DIACAP FedRAMP FIPSCOBIT CSAAICPA
FISMA
GLBAHITECHSA
S
ITAR ISO/IEC ISAE HIPAANIST MPAAPCI
NoSQL Sols• MongoDB• Cassandra• HBase
Agile Scaling w/AMAZON WEB SVCS
Created by Jez Humble of ThoughtWorks in 2011 Includes CM, build, testing, integration, release, etc. Goal is one-touch automation of deployment pipeline
29Humble, J., & Farley, D. (2011). Continuous delivery. Boston, MA: Pearson Education.Duvall, P., Matyas, S., & Glover, A. (2006). Continuous integration. Boston, MA: Addison-Wesley.Ohara, D. (2012). Continuous delivery and the world of devops. San Francisco, CA: GigaOM Pro.
CoQ
• 80% MS Tst• 8/10 No Val• $24B in 90s• Rep by CD• Not Add MLK
Agile Scaling w/CONTINUOUS DELIVERY
Goal of continuous delivery is releases vs. build/tests Market-driven releases creates rapid business value Assembla went from 2 to 45 monthly releases w/CD
30Singleton, A. (2014). Unblock: A guide to the new continuous agile. Needham, MA: Assembla, Inc.
62x FasterU.S. DoD
IT Project
3,645x FasterU.S. DoD
IT Project
Agile Scaling at ASSEMBLA
Google early adopter of agile methods and Scrum Google also uses agile testing at enterprise scale 15,000 developers run 120 million tests per day
31Micco, J. (2013). Continuous integration at google scale. Eclipse Con, Boston, MA.Whittaker, J., Arbon, J., & Carollo, J. (2012). How google tests software. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education.
440 billion unique users run 37 trillion searches each year Single monolithic code tree with mixed language code Submissions at head – One branch – All from source 20+ code changes/minute – 50% code change/month 5,500+ submissions/day – 120 million tests per day 80,000 builds per day – 20 million builds per year Auto code inspections – For low defect density 10X programming productivity improvement $150 million in annual labor savings (ROI as a result)
Agile Scaling at GOOGLE
Amazon adopted agile in 1999 and Scrum in 2004 Using enterprise-scale continuous delivery by 2010 30,000+ developers deploy over 8,600 releases a day
32Atlas, A. (2009). Accidental adoption: The story of scrum at amazon.com. Proceedings of the Agile 2009 Conference, Chicago, Illinois, USA, 135-140.Jenkins, J. (2011). Velocity culture at amazon.com. Proceedings of the Velocity 2011 Conference, Santa Clara, California, USA.Elisha, S. (2013). Continuous deployment with amazon web services. Proceedings of the AWS Summit 2013, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Software deployment every 11.6 seconds (as of 2011) 24,828 to 86,320 releases per Iteration 161,379 to 561,080 releases per Quarter 645,517 to 2,244,320 releases per Year
Automatic, split-second roll-forward & backward 75-90% reduction in release-caused outages (0.001%) Millions of times faster (than traditional methods) 4,357,241 to 15,149,160 per traditional release
Thousands of times faster (than manual agility) 161,379 to 561,080 per Scrum/SAFe release
Used agile methods long before U.S. government (1999)
Agile Scaling at AMAZON
Agile LEADERSHIP Models
Rico, D. F. (2013). Agile coaching in high-conflict environments. Retrieved April 11, 2013 from http://davidfrico.com/agile-conflict-mgt.pdfRico, D. F. (2013). Agile project management for virtual distributed teams. Retrieved July 29, 2013 from http://www.davidfrico.com/rico13m.pdfRico, D. F. (2013). Agile vs. traditional contract manifesto. Retrieved March 28, 2013 from http://www.davidfrico.com/agile-vs-trad-contract-manifesto.pdf 33
Personal Project Enterprise
• Don't Be a Know-it-All• Be Open & Willing to Learn• Treat People Respectfully• Be Gracious, Humble, & Kind• Listen & Be Slow-to-Speak• Be Patient & Longsuffering• Be Objective & Dispassionate• Don't Micromanage & Direct• Exhibit Maturity & Composure• Don't Escalate or Exacerbate• Don't Gossip or be Negative• Delegate, Empower, & Trust• Gently Coach, Guide, & Lead
• Customer Communication• Product Visioning• Distribution Strategy• Team Development• Standards & Practices• Telecom Infrastructure• Development Tools• High-Context Meetings• Coordination & Governance• F2F Communications• Consensus Based Decisions• Performance Management• Personal Development
• Business Value vs. Scope• Interactions vs. Contracts• Relationship vs. Regulation• Conversation vs. Negotiation• Consensus vs. Dictatorship• Collaboration vs. Control• Openness vs. Adversarialism• Exploration vs. Planning• Incremental vs. All Inclusive• Entrepreneurial vs. Managerial• Creativity vs. Constraints• Satisfaction vs. Compliance• Quality vs. Quantity
Power & authority delegated to the lowest level Tap into the creative nuclear power of team’s talent Coaching, communication, and relationships key skills
Agile ORG. CHANGE Models
Heath, C., & Heath, D. (2010). Switch: How to change things when change is hard. New York, NY: Random House.Patterson, K., et al. (2008). Influencer: The power to change anything: New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.Pink, D. H. (2009). Drive: The surprising truth about what motivates us. New York, NY: Riverhead Books.Heath, C., & Heath, D. (2013). Decisive: How to make better choices in life and work. New York, NY: Random House.
Change, no matter how small or large, is difficult Smaller focused changes help to cross the chasm Shrinking, simplifying, and motivation key factors
34
SWITCH
Follow the bright spots Script the critical moves Point to the destination
Find the feeling
Shrink the change Grow your people
Tweak the environment Build habits
Rally the herd
Direct the Rider
Motivate the Elephant
Shape the Path
INFLUENCER
Create new experiences Create new motives
Perfect complex skills Build emotional skills
Recruit public personalities Recruit influential leaders
Utilize teamwork Enlist the power of social capital
Use incentives wisely Use punishment sparingly
Make it easy Make it unavoidable
Make it Desirable
Surpass your Limits
Harness Peer Pressure
Find Strength in Numbers
Design Rewards
Change Environment
DRIVE
Purpose
Autonomy
Mastery
Purpose and profit equality Business and societal benefit Share control of profits Delegate implementation Culture and goal alignment Remake society and globe
Be accountable to someone Self-selected work tasks Self-directed work tasks Self-selected timelines Self-selected teams Self-selected implementation
Experimentation and innovation Align tasks to abilities Continuously improve abilities Elevate learning over profits Create challenging tasks Establish high expectations
DECISIVE
Villains of Good Decisions Narrow framing Confirmation bias Short term emotion Over confidence
Widen Your Options Avoid a narrow frame Multi-track Find someone who solved problem
Reality Test Assumptions Consider the opposite Zoom out & zoom in Ooch
Attain Distance Overcome short-term emotion Gather more info & shift perspective Self-directed work tasks
Prepare to be Wrong Bookend the future Set a tripwire Trust the process
Agile ACQUISITION-CONTRACT Model
Rico, D. F. (2011). The necessity of new contract models for agile project management. Fairfax, VA: Gantthead.Com.Rico, D. F. (2013). Agile vs. traditional contract manifesto. Retrieved March 28, 2013 from http://www.davidfrico.com 35
Dynamic Value Performance Based Target Cost Optional Scope Collaborative
Business & Mission Value OVER Scope, Processes, & Deliverables
Personal Interactions OVER Contract, Auditor, & Legal Interactions
Conversations and Consensus OVER Contract Negotiations & Control
Collaboration & Co-Dependency OVER Methodology & Adversarialism
Exploration, Evolution, & Emergence OVER Forecasting & Control
Early Continuous Quality Solutions OVER Late, Long-Term Deliveries
Entrepreneurialism & Openness OVER Compliance & Self-Interest
Customer Satisfaction and Quality OVER Policies & Governance
Communication, cooperation, and interaction key Shared responsibility vs. blame and adversarialism Needs greater focus on collaboration vs. legal terms
Key Agile SCALING POINTERS One must think and act small to accomplish big things Slow down to speed up, speed up ‘til wheels come off Scaling up lowers productivity, quality, & business value
36Rico, D. F. (2014). Dave's Notes: For Scaling with SAFe, DaD, LeSS, RAGE, ScrumPLoP, Enterprise Scrum, etc. Retrieved March 28, 2014 from http://davidfrico.com
EMPOWER WORKFORCE - Allow workers to help establish enterprise business goals and objectives.
ALIGN BUSINESS VALUE - Align and focus agile teams on delivering business value to the enterprise.
PERFORM VISIONING - Frequently communicate portfolio, project, and team vision on continuous basis.
REDUCE SIZE - Reduce sizes of agile portfolios, acquisitions, products, programs, projects, and teams.
ACT SMALL - Get large agile teams to act, behave, collaborate, communicate, and perform like small ones.
BE SMALL - Get small projects to act, behave, and collaborate like small ones instead of trying to act larger.
ACT COLLOCATED - Get virtual distributed teams to act, behave, communicate and perform like collocated ones.
USE SMALL ACQUISITION BATCHES - Organize suppliers to rapidly deliver new capabilities and quickly reprioritize.
USE LEAN-AGILE CONTRACTS - Use collaborative contracts to share responsibility instead of adversarial legal ones.
USE ENTERPRISE AUTOMATION - Automate everything with Continuous Integration, Continuous Delivery, & DevOps.
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