Whether your business is a small, fast-growing agile shop, or a larger company that is trying to adopt agile methodologies, success hinges on a proper foundation of roles, responsibilities, and processes. In this talk, we’ll cover how Trulia tackles these areas, and discuss how JIRA Agile helped us expand our agile cycles.
The document provides information about the Workforce Advancement Training grant program including changes to the grant process, available grants for 2014-2015, training opportunities offered through various consortium grants, and next steps for grant recipients. Key details include funding for continuous improvement, manufacturing blueprint reading, leadership development, and team building training consortiums, as well as some company-specific grants. Training courses range from Excel and blueprint reading to six sigma certification levels and leadership skills development. Dates and locations are given for upcoming trainings.
Roles of Project Managers in Agile TeamsAaron Medina
Roles of Project Managers in Agile Teams
[Traditional] Perspective of PMs
Scrum Team Roles
Servant Leadership
When will need our PMs?
A Question of Scale and Complexity
PM Roles and Responsibilities
The document discusses how a content team at Zix Corporation transitioned to using Agile methodology for managing their department. Some key aspects covered include using 1-week sprints, daily standup meetings, and tracking stories, epics and acceptance criteria on a scrum board. The team saw benefits like faster time to market, more flexibility, and better product quality. They established processes for defining documentation requirements during story workshops, reviewing docs after code completion, and tracking enhancements and defects on a documentation backlog. The presentation provides advice for other teams looking to adopt Agile, such as starting small, becoming integrated team members, and focusing on flexibility and reuse.
This certificate recognizes that Gerhard Risse successfully completed a course in project management principles. He passed assessments on project overview, concept and development phases, scoring highest on the first two modules. His final score was 85% after completing all assessments by February 9, 2016.
In this presentation, we will use a fast-paced, methodical approach to provide a full picture of what Agile is, how it works, who is using it and how you can use it. We’ll cover a lot of information, but will introduce, compare, and contrast concepts which encourage an objective picture based on your experience. Agile is not a panacea or a prescriptive methodology. At its foundation, it is a mentality and a way of working and managing work that permeates everything you do. We will discuss how that is and what that means in practical terms.
Doc sprints: The ultimate in collaborative document developmentSarah Maddox
This session discusses how to plan and run a successful doc sprint. The result is high-quality documentation, happy customers, and an enhanced reputation for your tech comm team.
Take the Red Pill: How Criteo revamped its software development processAgilar
Author: Adrian Perreau de Pinninck
Conference: Global Scrum Gathering Berlin 2014
Describes how Criteo managed to change the software engineering culture of its R&D department from 'Testing is cheating' to 22K+ tests being run every half hour.
These are the slides of the talk I gave at the Global Scrum Gathering Berlin in 2014.
It describes how Criteo managed to change the software engineering culture of its R&D department from 'Testing is cheating' to 22K+ tests being run every half hour.
This document discusses applying agile methods to product development beyond just software. It argues that agile can accelerate tangible product development by nesting sprints within milestone frameworks and establishing high-performance cross-functional teams. However, functional managers often resist ceding control and collaboration, posing the biggest challenge to success. Case studies show that focusing agile adoption on planning, demos, and facilitation can lead to improved schedule adherence, decision-making, and overall project accuracy despite higher prototyping costs.
The document provides an overview of agile frameworks including Scrum, Lean, and Kanban. It begins by defining agile and its history and principles. It then summarizes each framework in turn: Scrum focuses on iterative development with sprints and daily stand-ups; Lean aims to maximize value and minimize waste; and Kanban uses visual boards and work-in-progress limits to manage continuous flow. The document outlines key techniques for applying these frameworks outside of software development and emphasizes an evolutionary approach to process improvement.
This document discusses team and project leadership. It introduces the team and describes using a Team Canvas to define individual strengths, goals, values and ideas. It recommends establishing Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) to set quantitative and qualitative goals in areas like learning and skills development. Examples of tips for project leadership are given, such as bringing people together, encouraging safe discussion, and modeling good behavior. Scrum methods like planning, demos and retrospectives are suggested to structure projects. The importance of understanding stakeholders and challenges is emphasized, as well as leading confidently and questioning assumptions.
1. The document provides an overview of practical scrum concepts including lean thinking, agile principles, scrum roles and ceremonies.
2. It discusses the roles of the product owner, scrum master and team in scrum and describes the four main scrum ceremonies: sprint planning, daily scrum, sprint review, and retrospective.
3. Key aspects of each ceremony are outlined such as their purpose, participants, and goals to continuously deliver working software and improve the process.
What are the Tools & Techniques in Agile Project Management?Tuan Yang
Organizations, teams and even project management software are increasingly responding to a demand for more adaptive and evolutionary processes. In a fast-changing business world that needs to respond to rapid market and technology shifts, Agile delivers. Agile project management provides numerous benefits to organizations, project teams, and products.
Learn more about:
» Set up an Agile project.
» Assign roles and responsibilities.
» Create a prioritized list of requirements.
» Define increments and timeboxes.
» Manage a Solution Development Team or Teams.
» Use Agile techniques such as Feature Driven Development.
» Present the benefits of Agile approaches to Senior Management.
Agile Project Management explained and examined from several angles. Agile Software Development delivers better results when it is managed in an agile way.
Scrum day scaled agile - wolfgang hilpert - sascha gesslerWolfgang Hilpert
This document summarizes Sophos' transition to scaled agile practices from 2015-2016. It describes challenges with predictability and transparency in their previous process. Their goals for agile transformation included planning in 3 month cycles with 2 week sprints. Key insights included giving teams new experiences, aiming for feature teams, and investing in engineering excellence long-term. Scaling agile helped with alignment, quality, agility across teams, and continuous improvement.
Agile Australia 2017 - Transforming ING Direct - Our journey so farLeandro Pinter
ING Direct Australia has been transforming their organization to work in an Agile way since 2010. They conducted three waves of transformation:
Wave 1 focused on testing Agile but concluded it would not work for their bank. Wave 2 had some success with two pilot teams but struggled to scale Agile across large projects. Wave 3 involved reorganizing into domains and guilds, establishing new roles, and adopting practices like PACE to help teams deliver value faster through smaller, more frequent releases. This led to major improvements in time to market, on-budget deliveries, and team engagement. The next steps are continuing to evolve the organization and empowering teams to innovate. The key lessons are to start small, build transformation
The document discusses whether agile will kill project management. It presents some key differences between traditional project management and agile approaches. While agile prioritizes adapting to change over stickling to a predefined plan, it does not eliminate project management but rather changes it. Agile still uses practices like planning at different levels from programs to sprints, but allows for more flexibility in scope to keep costs and time fixed. The document argues project managers still have an important role in agile, but with less command-and-control and more of a focus on leading and facilitating teams.
The document discusses Scrum, an agile framework for managing complex projects. It describes Scrum's core components like sprints, roles, artifacts, and events. Sprints are short, timed iterations where self-organizing teams work on prioritized backlog items to create shippable increments. Key roles include the Product Owner who prioritizes features, and the Scrum Master who coaches the team. Artifacts include the Product and Sprint Backlogs and shippable increments. Events help the team inspect and adapt their process through planning, daily check-ins, reviews, and retrospectives. Many large companies have adopted Scrum to deliver working software frequently in response to changing requirements.
Learn how an evolved PMO can bring discipline to project prioritization, track project portfolios, and provide the support teams need to embrace Agile.
Getting Agile Right - Rebooting an Agile organization in 100 days - Agile Tou...Maurizio Mancini
Presentation at Agile Tour Montreal 2018 by Maurizio Mancini of Exempio and Paul T. Ryan CTO of OpenX.
Many organizations think they are Agile when they are not. Here is how to recognize when you need an Agile reboot and how to reboot your organization to become a true Agile organization.
Getting Agile Right - Rebooting an Agile Organization in 100 days - Agile Tou...Maurizio Mancini
Presentation by Senior Consultant Maurizio Mancini of Exempio.com about an Agile Reboot of one Agile organization that was accomplished in just 100 business days!
Scrum Framework: Manage Anything Efficiently and AccuratelyAmir Syafrudin
Note: This presentation is an update of my previous uploaded presentation found here: http://www.slideshare.net/AmirSyafrudin/scrum-methodology-managing-project-efficiently-and-accurately
This is a presentation material used to introduce Scrum Framework in the Directorate General of Taxes, Ministry of Finance, Republic of Indonesia.
Agile Methods - An Overview - Marc Bless - 2009Marc Bless
The document provides an overview of agile methods. It discusses the motivation for agile approaches due to failures of traditional waterfall planning. Key aspects of agile history and principles are outlined, including the Agile Manifesto which values individuals, working software, customer collaboration and responding to change over processes, documentation, contract negotiation and following a plan. Specific agile methods like Scrum, Extreme Programming and Feature Driven Development are also mentioned.
Here are the estimated story points for the items using Planning Poker:
Spain - 13
China - 13
Luxembourg - 5
Denmark - 8
South Africa - 8 (reference point)
Belize - 3
Take the Red Pill: How Criteo revamped its software development processAgilar
Author: Adrian Perreau de Pinninck
Conference: Global Scrum Gathering Berlin 2014
Describes how Criteo managed to change the software engineering culture of its R&D department from 'Testing is cheating' to 22K+ tests being run every half hour.
These are the slides of the talk I gave at the Global Scrum Gathering Berlin in 2014.
It describes how Criteo managed to change the software engineering culture of its R&D department from 'Testing is cheating' to 22K+ tests being run every half hour.
This document discusses applying agile methods to product development beyond just software. It argues that agile can accelerate tangible product development by nesting sprints within milestone frameworks and establishing high-performance cross-functional teams. However, functional managers often resist ceding control and collaboration, posing the biggest challenge to success. Case studies show that focusing agile adoption on planning, demos, and facilitation can lead to improved schedule adherence, decision-making, and overall project accuracy despite higher prototyping costs.
The document provides an overview of agile frameworks including Scrum, Lean, and Kanban. It begins by defining agile and its history and principles. It then summarizes each framework in turn: Scrum focuses on iterative development with sprints and daily stand-ups; Lean aims to maximize value and minimize waste; and Kanban uses visual boards and work-in-progress limits to manage continuous flow. The document outlines key techniques for applying these frameworks outside of software development and emphasizes an evolutionary approach to process improvement.
This document discusses team and project leadership. It introduces the team and describes using a Team Canvas to define individual strengths, goals, values and ideas. It recommends establishing Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) to set quantitative and qualitative goals in areas like learning and skills development. Examples of tips for project leadership are given, such as bringing people together, encouraging safe discussion, and modeling good behavior. Scrum methods like planning, demos and retrospectives are suggested to structure projects. The importance of understanding stakeholders and challenges is emphasized, as well as leading confidently and questioning assumptions.
1. The document provides an overview of practical scrum concepts including lean thinking, agile principles, scrum roles and ceremonies.
2. It discusses the roles of the product owner, scrum master and team in scrum and describes the four main scrum ceremonies: sprint planning, daily scrum, sprint review, and retrospective.
3. Key aspects of each ceremony are outlined such as their purpose, participants, and goals to continuously deliver working software and improve the process.
What are the Tools & Techniques in Agile Project Management?Tuan Yang
Organizations, teams and even project management software are increasingly responding to a demand for more adaptive and evolutionary processes. In a fast-changing business world that needs to respond to rapid market and technology shifts, Agile delivers. Agile project management provides numerous benefits to organizations, project teams, and products.
Learn more about:
» Set up an Agile project.
» Assign roles and responsibilities.
» Create a prioritized list of requirements.
» Define increments and timeboxes.
» Manage a Solution Development Team or Teams.
» Use Agile techniques such as Feature Driven Development.
» Present the benefits of Agile approaches to Senior Management.
Agile Project Management explained and examined from several angles. Agile Software Development delivers better results when it is managed in an agile way.
Scrum day scaled agile - wolfgang hilpert - sascha gesslerWolfgang Hilpert
This document summarizes Sophos' transition to scaled agile practices from 2015-2016. It describes challenges with predictability and transparency in their previous process. Their goals for agile transformation included planning in 3 month cycles with 2 week sprints. Key insights included giving teams new experiences, aiming for feature teams, and investing in engineering excellence long-term. Scaling agile helped with alignment, quality, agility across teams, and continuous improvement.
Agile Australia 2017 - Transforming ING Direct - Our journey so farLeandro Pinter
ING Direct Australia has been transforming their organization to work in an Agile way since 2010. They conducted three waves of transformation:
Wave 1 focused on testing Agile but concluded it would not work for their bank. Wave 2 had some success with two pilot teams but struggled to scale Agile across large projects. Wave 3 involved reorganizing into domains and guilds, establishing new roles, and adopting practices like PACE to help teams deliver value faster through smaller, more frequent releases. This led to major improvements in time to market, on-budget deliveries, and team engagement. The next steps are continuing to evolve the organization and empowering teams to innovate. The key lessons are to start small, build transformation
The document discusses whether agile will kill project management. It presents some key differences between traditional project management and agile approaches. While agile prioritizes adapting to change over stickling to a predefined plan, it does not eliminate project management but rather changes it. Agile still uses practices like planning at different levels from programs to sprints, but allows for more flexibility in scope to keep costs and time fixed. The document argues project managers still have an important role in agile, but with less command-and-control and more of a focus on leading and facilitating teams.
The document discusses Scrum, an agile framework for managing complex projects. It describes Scrum's core components like sprints, roles, artifacts, and events. Sprints are short, timed iterations where self-organizing teams work on prioritized backlog items to create shippable increments. Key roles include the Product Owner who prioritizes features, and the Scrum Master who coaches the team. Artifacts include the Product and Sprint Backlogs and shippable increments. Events help the team inspect and adapt their process through planning, daily check-ins, reviews, and retrospectives. Many large companies have adopted Scrum to deliver working software frequently in response to changing requirements.
Learn how an evolved PMO can bring discipline to project prioritization, track project portfolios, and provide the support teams need to embrace Agile.
Getting Agile Right - Rebooting an Agile organization in 100 days - Agile Tou...Maurizio Mancini
Presentation at Agile Tour Montreal 2018 by Maurizio Mancini of Exempio and Paul T. Ryan CTO of OpenX.
Many organizations think they are Agile when they are not. Here is how to recognize when you need an Agile reboot and how to reboot your organization to become a true Agile organization.
Getting Agile Right - Rebooting an Agile Organization in 100 days - Agile Tou...Maurizio Mancini
Presentation by Senior Consultant Maurizio Mancini of Exempio.com about an Agile Reboot of one Agile organization that was accomplished in just 100 business days!
Scrum Framework: Manage Anything Efficiently and AccuratelyAmir Syafrudin
Note: This presentation is an update of my previous uploaded presentation found here: http://www.slideshare.net/AmirSyafrudin/scrum-methodology-managing-project-efficiently-and-accurately
This is a presentation material used to introduce Scrum Framework in the Directorate General of Taxes, Ministry of Finance, Republic of Indonesia.
Agile Methods - An Overview - Marc Bless - 2009Marc Bless
The document provides an overview of agile methods. It discusses the motivation for agile approaches due to failures of traditional waterfall planning. Key aspects of agile history and principles are outlined, including the Agile Manifesto which values individuals, working software, customer collaboration and responding to change over processes, documentation, contract negotiation and following a plan. Specific agile methods like Scrum, Extreme Programming and Feature Driven Development are also mentioned.
Here are the estimated story points for the items using Planning Poker:
Spain - 13
China - 13
Luxembourg - 5
Denmark - 8
South Africa - 8 (reference point)
Belize - 3
Outcome Based Backlogs @ Scaling Agile BrusselsJürgen De Smet
The document discusses alternatives to a flat list backlog for product development, including organizing work by outcome, behavior, who, and what. It suggests using techniques like impact mapping, design thinking, story maps, and assumptions to help with discovery and delivery. Charts are shown organizing teams and sprints around a widely important goal and tracking work by refinement state, complexity, and delivery stage.
LeSS - Outcome Based Backlogs - Warsaw 10-2019Jürgen De Smet
slides used during LeSS Warsaw meetup on outcome based backlogs providing insights how to use a cocktail of techniques to make the best out of it.
You can find embedded Bug Fixing Tournament video here: https://youtu.be/ZMuJA-QXJhk
This document discusses the key elements of Scrum, including roles, artifacts, and events. It emphasizes that the main purposes of Scrum are to maximize value, make Scrum work for the organization, and help teams collaborate effectively. It stresses the importance of empirical process control and learning cycles in Scrum, with transparency, inspection, and adaptation at different levels. The document concludes that the biggest enemy of Scrum is not using it properly and failing to accept and apply lessons learned.
Thanks to HBR, McKinsey and more of those, Agile has become mainstream but is it Agile? I see Agile being used as a synonym of Scrum even though Agile is more of an umbrella where Scrum is just one flavour of getting there. Many inquiries show that Scrum is the most used Agile flavour in the world and I’m here to tell you to stop that movement unless you truly mean it.
Let me guide you through some basic elements and help you evaluate if you and your organisation should ditch Scrum or not. Help you recognise if you are truly a Scrum Master or rather a Scrum Novice. And much more.
Webinar - Re-design the Organisation for Business AgilityJürgen De Smet
The document discusses rethinking organizational structure and levels of self-management. It explores various approaches like Teal, Holacracy, Sociocracy, Podularity and Agile and considers what level of self-management is optimal. It advocates using systems thinking and modeling constraints to understand optimization. It also emphasizes the importance of learning from others through experimentation to determine the right level of self-management for a given organization and context.
This case study documents the transformation of the IT department of a large telecom operator from siloed teams to a more agile organization. The department originally suffered from technical and organizational debt, offshoring, and penalties for missed deadlines. After implementing agile practices like Scrum, the organization saw improved time to market, quality, ability to handle change, productivity, and visibility. Employees reported faster time to market, improved quality, and better ability to handle changes. The transformation was a success, with 92% of employees not wanting to return to the previous way of working.
This is the presentation used to pitch "Birzo" to the jury of Startup Weekend Brussels. After 52 hours of hard work we went from idea to prototype backed up with a business plan. Detailed info: http://www.westartup.eu/ideas/beer-profiling-taste-matching-team-at-swbru/
OpenAgileRO - Perfect problem breakthroughJürgen De Smet
This document introduces Jürgen De Smet and Erik Talboom as experts in problem breakthrough. It lists intention, awareness, and confrontation as key steps to problem breakthrough and provides Erik Talboom's contact information for those seeking help with this process.
OpenAgileRO - The financials behind Software developmentJürgen De Smet
The document discusses optimizing return on investment (ROI) for software projects. It provides an example showing how reducing operational costs from 150,000 to 80,000 euros by investing in process improvements can increase ROI from 4.6 to 8.75. The document argues managers should focus on optimizing business value through continuous improvement actions rather than top-line revenue or backlog size alone. Product owners are encouraged to prioritize activities improving team capacity and ROI over staying fully busy.
Introduction to the Pirate Metrics – AARRR related to customer development and business model canvas in order to gain insights on how your customers behave and create an environment where you easily can validate startup hypothesis avoiding the commonly used feel good metrics.
The document discusses the concept of real options decision making, which advocates keeping options open for as long as possible by gathering information and only committing to decisions when necessary. It involves identifying available options and their associated conditions, timelines, and costs. The goal is to deal with risk by making decisions later when more information is available. Examples are provided of how real options can be applied in areas like product design and dimensional planning.
The document discusses the Theory of Constraints and introduces a "Bottleneck Game" to illustrate its key concepts. The Theory of Constraints focuses on identifying the bottleneck, or constraint, that limits an organization's ability to achieve its goal. It then recommends exploiting the bottleneck to maximize its output, subordinating all other decisions to the bottleneck, and elevating the bottleneck by finding ways to increase its capacity. The game is designed to demonstrate how focusing on the bottleneck can increase an organization's throughput and profits.
The document describes a "Coin Flipping Game" lean production simulation where participants take on roles like customer, CEO, process engineer, and employee to experience a production process with variability and waste. Players work to complete tasks by flipping coins within time limits to see the effects of variability on throughput and identify ways to eliminate waste from the process. The simulation is followed by a retrospective to discuss lessons on lean concepts and how to improve productivity and workflow.
Own Your Own AI Infrastructure that is Scalable, Affordable, and Secure!ideatoipo
Recorded on Friday, April 4, 2025.
In this video, the speaker discusses:
Why Now is the Time for Your Own AI Cluster:
Cut Costs: Avoid rising cloud expenses. Access powerful AI capabilities at a fraction of the cost snd achieve high-performance without recurring fees.
Data Control: Retain full ownership of your data and AI workloads. With built-in security and performance monitoring, your infrastructure is always protected and optimized.
Meet Your Budget: fully integrated, customizable, and budget-friendly alternative that allows businesses to deploy, manage, and scale their AI capabilities without the usual obstacles
Seamless Scalability: Easily scale with your business needs, providing flexibility without requiring in-house AI expertise.
All-in-One Solution: Fully integrated with GPU servers, storage, Linux pre-installed, and DHCP configured—ready for immediate use.
Future-Proof Your Business: Owning your AI cluster ensures you stay competitive in an AI-driven market, with the ability to innovate faster.
Get the perfect blend of affordability, control, and scalability -- the ideal solution for enterprises ready to embrace AI without breaking the bank!
The Quantea QAI Cluster presentation introduces a powerful, scalable, and cost-effective alternative to traditional cloud-based or proprietary AI infrastructure solutions. It positions Quantea as a champion of democratizing AI by making high-performance computing accessible to businesses of all sizes. Through a combination of modular design, affordable pricing, and built-in performance monitoring and security features, the QAI Cluster empowers organizations to deploy on-premises AI clusters that meet their specific GPU, storage, and operating system needs—while maintaining full control over their data.
The presentation showcases detailed cost comparisons against NVIDIA DGX Cluster and public cloud offerings (AWS and Google Cloud), illustrating how QAI Clusters can reduce total cost of ownership by 30–50%. With flexible configurations starting from just 4 NVIDIA H100 GPUs and scaling to over 100 nodes with many GPUs, the system supports everything from early-stage experimentation to enterprise-scale AI workloads. The platform also emphasizes energy efficiency, ease of deployment, and compatibility with NVIDIA stacks, all while incorporating real-time performance monitoring and intrusion detection. Designed for industries ranging from healthcare to finance, the Quantea QAI Cluster is also fully integrated and preconfigured at all-in-one convenience and positioned as the intelligent path to owning your AI future—securely, affordably, and on your terms.
About the Speaker:
Nan Liu is the CEO of Quantea, a leading innovator in network packet data analytics and AI infrastructure.
How Dynamic Pricing Can Revolutionize Your Retail Store’s ProfitabilityRUPAL AGARWAL
Discover how dynamic pricing strategies can transform your retail store’s revenue and competitiveness. This presentation explores real-time pricing models, data-driven tools, and market-based adjustments that help maximize profits while enhancing customer satisfaction. Perfect for retail managers, eCommerce entrepreneurs, and business strategists looking to stay ahead in a fast-changing market.
Vietnam is one of the most attractive destinations for foreign investment, with Ho Chi Minh City being the commercial hub of the country. However, doing business in Vietnam is not without challenges, particularly when legal disputes arise.
Understanding these risks is the first step in mitigating potential legal problems.
Learn more: https://antlawyers.vn/disputes/dispute-law-firms-in-ho-chi-minh-city-5.html
Forbes named Dr, Tran Quoc Bao, the sole Vietnamese healthcare leader amongst...Ignite Capital
Asia is home to some of the most dynamic healthcare leaders, shaping the future of medicine through innovation, accessibility, and patient-centered care.
In Vietnam, Tran Quoc Bao has elevated Prima Saigon Medical Center into a beacon of international healthcare standards. Known for his commitment to excellence, Bao has made the center a trusted name in the region.
In India, Dr. Alok Khullar, CEO of Gleneagles HealthCity Chennai, brings a physician’s insight to hospital leadership, making his institution a hub for high-acuity care and medical tourism. Pankaj Sahni, Group CEO of Medanta, has turned his organization into a global model for research-driven, patient-first care. At Narayana Health, Emmanuel Rupert leads with a mission to deliver affordable, world-class care to millions, continuing the legacy of visionary Dr. Devi Shetty.
Dr. Shilpa Tatake, Group COO at Jupiter Hospital, is one of the few women in senior healthcare leadership in India, known for her efficient, empathetic style. Bhavdeep Singh, former Fortis CEO, remains a key influencer, praised for advancing digitization and patient experience.
In China, David Chang (WuXi Advanced Therapies), John Oyler (BeiGene), and Zhao Bingxiang (China Resources Pharmaceutical) are driving breakthroughs in biotech and pharma. Peter DeYoung of India’s Piramal Group also stands out for his innovation in healthcare technology.
These leaders—whether in hospitals, biotech, or pharma—are redefining healthcare across Asia. From operating rooms to boardrooms, their work is transforming lives and setting global standards for what healthcare can and should be.
"Unlock the power of digital entrepreneurship with Drop Servicing Mastery! This presentation walks you through how to build a profitable online business by selling services you don’t fulfill yourself. Learn how to find in-demand services, outsource them effectively, and create a streamlined workflow with minimal upfront investment. Ideal for beginners and experienced freelancers looking to scale with automation and smart delegation. Includes access to video training and exclusive strategies in the member area. Start your journey to digital freedom today!"
At the Investment Summit 2025, BIDA Chairman Chowdhury Ashik Mahmud Bin Harun shared a forward-looking vision of Bangladesh as a regional manufacturing hub by 2035, emphasizing the strength of its young population, expanding domestic market, and ongoing policy reforms. He called on investors to see beyond financial returns and join Bangladesh in its broader journey of transformation and growth, citing 100 years of successful business operations in Bangladesh's economic history.
Israel Phoenix Mental Health Tech Delegation - Company CatalogueLevi Shapiro
May 5-7 Israel mental healthtech scaleup delegation to Phoenix. Description of each company, including the following:
Kai
XRHealth
MyndYou
Calmigo
Circles
Behavidence
Neurosteer
BabyLiveAdvice
Toko
MindTension
Xoltar
Equanimity AI
The Business of Tomorrow- A Data-First Approach to B2B Market Leadership.pdfJasper Colin
The future of B2B leadership is data-first. Discover how Jasper Colin leveraged AI-driven personalization, omnichannel engagement, and influencer marketing to drive growth and stay ahead.
Ian McAllister - An Acclaimed Filmmaker.pdfIan McAllister
Ian McAllister, a devoted advocate for the preservation of wildlife, has spent many years capturing the awe-inspiring beauty of Canada's western coast. Through his captivating photography and films, the University of Victoria graduate has played a vital role in raising awareness about the urgent need to safeguard the Great Bear Rainforest.
Vietnam is one of the most attractive destinations for foreign investment, with Ho Chi Minh City being the commercial hub of the country. However, doing business in Vietnam is not without challenges, particularly when legal disputes arise.
Understanding these risks is the first step in mitigating potential legal problems.
Learn more: https://antlawyers.vn/disputes/dispute-law-firms-in-ho-chi-minh-city-5.html
You’ve done a mountain of customer research. There’s a million ways the customer is struggling and customer discovery and shaping have helped you define the possibilities. How do you make sensible decisions about what to do when you have too much information?
Getting technical, design and business people together to figure out what you’re saying yes to before we commit to building it is shaping work. Now framing work begins and that is the point where you should expect really hard conversations. Framing is about the problem and the business value. It’s the work we do to challenge a problem, narrow it down, and to find out if the business has interest and urgency to solve it.
Framing is about understanding the business tradeoffs involved in building new features you could build and making informed decisions about what to prioritise. The customer says they want feature A. What will the customer do without it? How much resource will it require to build? Will the feature help you gain customers? Without it will the feature lose you customers?
Ryan shares some trusted frameworks and tools that can help you to define what you’re going to go invest your precious time and energy into next and help you answer the question, what do you say no to?
E-Square Steering Wheel Lockout Covers are designed to prevent unauthorized vehicle operation and enhance workplace security. These durable covers serve as a highly visible deterrent, reinforcing compliance with lockout tagout protocols.
Steering wheel covers are made from rugged materials, they withstand harsh environments while providing a secure locking mechanism. These covers are easy to install, help mitigate risks, reduce accidents, and enhance operational control. These covers are ideal for industrial sites, logistics hubs, and fleet management.
Jatin Mansata - A Recognized Financial ExpertJatin Mansata
Jatin Mansata is a financial markets leader and teacher with a deep commitment to social change. As the CEO and Director of JM Global Equities, he’s recognized for his acumen for derivatives and equities.
The Dark Side of AI: Social, environmental & economic impact and what to do a...Jutta Eckstein
AI-based recruiting tools don’t like women. An average ChatGPT conversation consumes 500ml/ 16,91oz of water. Data annotators are not only challenged by low wages but also by mental health issues. These examples show that AI has issues addressing social, environmental, and economic sustainability.
All too often we are looking at the bright side only: the opportunities, innovations, conveniences (e.g., write that article for me), and fun (e.g., create that fun image). And certainly, AI does or can enhance both our private and professional lives. However, these enhancements come at a price. This has been observed by the UN, with the consequence that a resolution has been adopted to promote “safe, secure, and trustworthy AI systems that also benefit sustainable development.”
In this session, I want to explore practices that can help us all to become aware of our blind spots and this way be able to create AI 4 Sustainability. So, it seems AI 4 Sustainability requires a lot of work. Let’s get started.
4. 4
• 9 component teams
• ~75 backlogs
• 1 PO per 1-2 team(s)
• Architects working as technical PO
• Project managers
• Fights between Waterfall, Scrum, Kanban, EVO, …
Y SOFT R&D 11/2016
5. 5
• Isolated part of the product
• Separate company
• Shared codebase with the rest of SafeQ
• 2 teams (Frontend & Backend) – 14 people
• 2 team leads
• 1 product manager
• 1 engineering manager
SCANNING
12. 12
• Removed management layer
• Removing “but” from
Scrumbut
• Incredible support from VP
• PO with strategy and vision
• Community of Scrum
masters
• Firewall around the team • Cultural pushback
• Fear of failure in the team
17. 17
• VP level attended CLP
• Co-friends since June 2019
• Co-Learning helped us
convince the board
• Aleš is our biggest supporter
across the company
• Continuously failing
communication
• We designed metrics but
didn’t go live with them
21. 21
• Multi-Layered for a reasonably small organization
• No clear PO - firefighting organization
• 898 build plans in total
• A lot of item statuses available for workflow
EXAMPLES
ASSESSMENT FROM CO-LEARNING
39. 39
• We have product definition!
• No official change team
• Only volunteers
• Lots of people involved
• Poorly communicated
preparation goals
• Nobody wanted to be PO
• People appeared and
disappeared
41. 41
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Lots of activity
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene
42. 42
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Autumn 2018
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Lots of activity
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene
44. 44
• We went from zero to many in no time
• Some of them used by subject matter experts as way to control work
• Most of them without idea how to work as CoP
• Webinar from Co-Learning was game changer
• Security team transformed to CoP with strong vision and strategy
COMMUNITIES OF PRACTICE
46. 46
• Introducing personal
responsibility
• We focused on influencers
• Open space in every location
• Involvement of PR guys
• Security CoP as role model
• VP of Product management
as PO
• Continuously failing
communication
• VP in charge is leaving 3
weeks before the Flip
• People appeared and
disappeared
• Huge cultural pushback
• Decision to postpone flip
47. 47
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Autumn 2018
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene
48. 48
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Autumn 2018
Technical workshops
Flip postpone
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene
49. 49
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Autumn 2018
January 2019
Technical workshops
Flip postpone
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene
66. 66
• Collocated team
• Size 6-10 people
• Deliver as much PBI independently as possible
• High diversity of skills and personalities
• Only team members, Scrum masters and managers continue
TEAM SELF-DESIGN
83. 83
• Strong statement from
C-level about importance of
change
• Transparency of single PBL
• Bug matrix
• Feature teams
• L4 support team
• Roadmap was confirmed 30
hours before the Flip
• Fail with DoD
• Culture of chitchatting
84. 84
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Autumn 2018
January 2019
Technical workshops
Flip postpone
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene
85. 85
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Autumn 2018
January 2019
Technical workshops
Flip postpone
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Flip
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene
86. 86
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Autumn 2018
January 2019
Technical workshops
Flip postpone
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Flip
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene
September 2019
88. 88
• Blame LeSS for our old
pains
• Weak product strategy and
vision
• Face slap from poor CI
• Management pushing
efficiency
• Roles dysfunctions filled by
Scrum masters
• Underestimated effects of
the change to the whole
company
• Larman’s laws are true
• Old pains suddenly very
visible
• We are delivering whole
product increments
• Higher focus
• R&D is not blackbox
anymore
89. 89
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Autumn 2018
January 2019
Technical workshops
Flip postpone
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Flip
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene
September 2019
90. 90
July 2017
Spring 2018
Summer 2018
Autumn 2018
January 2019
Technical workshops
Flip postpone
Technical assessment
Initial workshops
Flip
Y SOFT LeSS ADOPTION
Demo team in Scrum
We have decision
Co-Learning on scene LeSS conference
September 2019
91. 91
• Everybody can be enabler with inspirational vision
• You need strong support from execs
• Extreme transparency is a must
• You need external help to help with internal conflicts
• Politics is your good friend and worst enemy
• System modelling is your best friend
• Communication, communication, communication…
• Many failures will happen, don’t take them personally
PERSONAL LESSONS LEARNED