Age of Product’s Food for Thought of December 4th, 2017—shared with 5,066 peers—focusses on agile myth-busting, team dysfunctions, and how trust among teammates influences creativity.
We then dive deep into why switching to Kanban will not fixing your Scrum problems, and how to keep stakeholders and agile teams aligned.
We then support David Cancel’s notion that listening to customers is king and learn how the Kano model supports product discovery. Speaking of which: Marty Cagan identifies key risks that you should better tackle during the discovery work.
Last but not least, Om Malik reflects on Silicon Valley’s distinct lack of empathy for “normal people”.
Enjoy a great Sunday!
Agile Myths & Scrum
: Scrum Is Not Agile
Tanner Wortham reminds us not to confuse mechanics and mindset.
(via Architects Anonymous): No planning fallacy – Agile Anti Patterns
Nigel Hamer suggests to overcome the agile planning fallacy – being too optimistic, thus causing cost overruns and delays – by planning little and often.
: Why switching to Kanban won’t solve your problems
Marc Löffler lists ‘reasons’ why Scrum teams move to Kanban and explains why taking your (general) problems from Scrum to Kanban won’t help solving them.
(via AgileNZ Conference): Dealing with dysfunction
Matthew Hodgson shares his slidedeck from Agile NZ 2016 on team dysfunction, detailing how you can use couples counseling patterns to manage team conflict.
: Teams, Trust, & Creativity
David DeSteno, psychology professor at Northeastern University, explores the role of trustworthiness in the workplace, and its influence on creativity and team productivity.
: Keep agile teams aligned
Chris Butler introduces the ‘strategy kernel canvas’ to keep stakeholders and agile teams aligned.
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Product & Lean
(via Mind The Product): The Importance of Listening to Your Customers by David Cancel
David Cancel addresses the importance of listening to your customers – “one of things we always talk about but few people do”.
: Planning Product Discovery
Marty Cagan talks about how he frames discovery work to ensure alignment and identifies key risks that need to be tackled during the discovery work.
and : Before the Backlog – The Vital Upfront Research
Robert Sprigge explains the function of the business analyst who supports the product discovery part of the agile development process in detail.
(via Medium): Applying Leverage as a Product Manager
Brandon Chu explains why he asks every product manager joining his team to read ‘High Output Management’ by Andy Grove.
The Essential Read
(via The New Yorker): Silicon Valley Has an Empathy Vacuum
Om Malik reflects on Silicon Valley’s distinct lack of empathy for those whose lives are disturbed by its technological wizardry.