Should We Have Longer Sprints?
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by Christian Bisson
I’ve recently been part of a discussion concerning changing the length of sprints from two weeks to three weeks, and the product increments (“PI” from SAFe) from 10 weeks to 12 weeks. Hearing the arguments throughout the meeting made me realize how the impact the sprints have on teams is greatly underestimated. Also, it’s important to note that in this case, the sprint length is aligned for all teams—meaning all teams need to change. In the discussion I was in, the arguments for having longer sprints were that it would reduce the number of meetings (therefore deliver more value), and that we would have better sprint reviews. Let’s review those arguments, and other factors to consider
The Number of MeetingsAssuming we are only referring to “agile” meetings, it’s true that the events (ceremonies) will occur once every three weeks instead of two weeks. However, aside from the daily scrums, the length of each of those meetings is expected to be extended accordingly. For example, a good rule of thumb for sprint planning length is about one hour per week in the sprint, so a two-week sprint would have a two-hour sprint planning meeting, and a three-week sprint would have a three-hour meeting—making it an average of one hour per week, and thus not really saving time. The same goes for the review and the retrospective. The daily is the exception; that would remain at a maximum of 15 minutes every day, so no gain there either.
Better Sprint ReviewsIn theory, since sprints would be longer, teams should deliver more within them (more on that under “Predictability” below)—and that will allow teams to present more accomplished work. Depending on your circumstances, one could even argue that stakeholders would need less travel time to attend the review since it’s once per three weeks instead of two (although these days, even that argument has lost its value!). But let’s look at the other side of the medal. The review is a key event to gather feedback from stakeholders and obtain precious information to move forward. That now happens less often, and could risk gaps in communication. In some cases, releasing an increment of work is not possible without having approvals within the review, meaning that value could be delivered slower. So for this argument, I would caution analyzing your circumstances properly before deciding it’s a good idea to change the length of the sprints.
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Fighting Imposter Syndrome as a Project Manager
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By Yasmina Khelifi, PMI-ACP, PMI-PBA, PMP Why is it so important to recognize and fight imposter syndrome? Over my project manager career, I have often felt imposter syndrome—especially when I began a new position or started on a new team. Psychologists Pauline Rose Clance and Suzanne Imes developed the concept, originally termed “imposter phenomenon,” in their 1978 founding study “The imposter phenomenon in high achieving women.” Imposter syndrome is defined as “a psychological condition that is characterized by persistent doubt concerning one's abilities or accomplishments accompanied by the fear of being exposed as a fraud despite evidence of one's ongoing success.” Let me share with you a painful memory from my early days as a project manager. I was interviewed for a position in a more operational role, and I felt miserable in the interview. I was hesitant, diminishing what I did (“It was a small project”). I was accepted, but I nonetheless began the new role thinking that I was chosen by luck and not because of my accomplishments. I was going to replace one contractor on a team that was formed by contractors. I lacked so much self-confidence that I asked many silly questions at each step. One day, I needed to retrieve an FTP file, but I didn't have access. I went to one of the contractors, and he told me, "I will not do it for you because you have to learn to do it." I stayed voiceless. "The excess of humility—appreciated and encouraged in some cultures and countries—does not serve you well!" she told me. “You have to describe fairly and positively what you achieved." It was an eye-opening conversation. The way you introduce yourself in a new environment can influence your credibility. Over the years, here are some strategies I’ve developed to fight imposter syndrome: 1. Be proud of your achievements. Focus on what you have achieved so far. I do this in two ways:
I will also put sticky note reminders on my computer with some encouraging words and tips—for example: "Speak slowly and breathe when you speak in English" (as English is not my first language).
Surround yourself with a circle of kind friends you trust and who can give you honest feedback. Is there a former alumnus from your college you can reconnect with? A former colleague/manager you can talk to from time to time? Do you know a more seasoned project manager you can connect with? I don’t mention “mentor,” as I have a team of mentors more than a unique mentor. You may also have friends outside of work willing to listen to you—they will help you reframe the situation you’re experiencing.
I’m part of several project management communities at work and through PMI. I’m also a member of some PMI chapters. It’s the place where I turn to when I have doubts. Don’t stay alone! Others face the same issues as you, and that realization will energize you and push you to find new perspectives.
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How Are You Finding Information?
Categories:
Communications Management
Categories: Communications Management
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By: Lynda Bourne We now live in an age where Google search is ubiquitous, and the “find” function in Word and PDF documents is almost instantaneous. The challenge for most people is sorting through the long lists of information returned from a search to locate the most useful items. This was not always the case. As Dennis Duncan—a British writer, translator and lecturer—set out in his book Index, A History of the: A Bookish Adventure[1], the need for indexing first emerged in the 13th century and has been evolving ever since. There are basically two indexing systems. The simplest is a listing of the important words that occur in a reference book, identifying the pages or sections in which the word is used. The more complex system is built around topics and identifies the section of a book in which the topic is discussed, often indexing multiple publications. Both systems were developed around the year 1230, and marks the change from a time when books were a valued artifact to be read and enjoyed, to one where books became an information repository to be used as a resource. The invention of the printing press would not occur for another 200 years (1440), so in 1230 books were an incredibly valuable resource in limited supply. The word “index” was invented in Paris by a Dominican Abbot named Hugh of Saint-Cher. The Dominicans are a preaching or mendicant religious order, founded in 1216. Their calling was to have Friars live among the people in big cities and preach sermons to stop the flock from going astray. To help his Friars write their sermons, Saint-Cher instructed a group at the Dominican Friary of Saint-Jacques to create a word index, or a concordance, of the Bible. Every single word in the Bible was put in alphabetical order with a locator indicating where that word appears. The friars listed about 10,000 individual words and 129,000 locations. As a consequence of this work (that still exists), the preaching Friars writing new sermons were able to find the information they needed reliably and consistently.
In the 13th century, very few people could read, and books were scarce, making the oral delivery of information vital either as a lecture or a sermon. But delivering a lecture (or sermon), required information to be sourced, organized, synthesised and written down in preparation for the delivery. This means the presenter needed to use books—not just read books, but to be able to go back and use the contents of books as an information resource. Engaging with a book transitioned from being a linear process where the reader had all the time in the world to journey from end to end, to one where books became seen as storehouses of morsels of information. The invention of indexes allowed people to use and research their books more efficiently, enabling them to preach or lecture at short notice. 800 years later, these concepts are still evolving. Unfortunately, the traditional concept of indexing is rapidly disappearing. The fundamental requirement for an index is a page number, and e-books don’t have set pages; the page a word appears on changes depending on the font size and screen size selected by the reader. This is a pity; creating a good index is both an art and a craft, requiring interpretation and judgement to look at each passage and decide what words a person would use to look for that specific text. On the other hand, Robert Grosseteste’s concept of the general (or subject) index has moved from the world of academia to mainstream. Google indexes millions of pages of new information every day. Both Google and the various feeds to your PDA index then select what you see based on the topics you are interested in, filtered by the application of a liberal dose of artificial intelligence (AI). The challenge for everyone in the modern era is being able to filter and validate the thousands of returns from a typical Google search and to make sure their feeds are not too limited. The various systems will order the information you see in a way its AI systems calculate will give you the best experience. But best from the system’s perspective is that you like the result and will therefore use it again. This is not the same as offering the most accurate selection of information, particularly if there are contradictory viewpoints. How reliable do you find the search engines and indexes you use to find information? [1] Index, A History of the: A Bookish Adventure, Duncan, D. Allen Lane, UK, 2021. ISBN: 9780241374238 |
3 Questions To Ask Yourself This New Year
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By Yasmina Khelifi, PMI-ACP, PMI-PBA, PMP I was a big fan of New Year’s resolutions. I used to write clear and precise ones, and I tried to keep them and refer to them during the year. It put me under pressure and, unconsciously, left little space for the unexpected. But if there’s one thing that the pandemic has taught us, it’s that we cannot control everything. In 2020, there was a lockdown in France—and all that I planned to accomplish could not happen. On the contrary, I could create many new things (like a podcast) and meet new people by getting more involved in volunteering. A usual January activity for me is to update my CV and portfolio of achievements. It helps me gain confidence. What do you typically do at the beginning of the year to set yourself up for success? Let's get prepared for this new year! I propose to you three lenses to view this coming year through:
1. What new thing would you like to experiment with? Some of us are getting back to work in an office, others continue working from home or in a hybrid model. How do your teams feel about it? As a project leader, you don't necessarily have the power to change the organizational rules, but you must advocate for your teams. How were your projects impacted last year? Did you take the time to discuss this with your teams? Uncertainty, fear and grief might be part of our lives for some months. During this outbreak, we all have learned that work can be done differently and still in a very efficient manner. How can we smooth the work of our teams and colleagues? Shall we reduce the length of meetings and/or reduce the number of meetings? Should we stop having meetings at 6 p.m. on Fridays? Don't refrain from having big goals, even if it looks ridiculous. You have the right to want to challenge yourself and be ambitious. What new things would you like to try this year? 2. How are you developing your network and meeting new people? In the Harvard Business Review article “Learn from People, Not Classes,” the writers share this important observation: “The most successful leaders we know learn differently: by tapping into what we call network intelligence.” Some of you may think that remote work reduces the possibility of meeting new people. Plus, the pandemic has uncovered a strong desire to relate to people differently. This is what happened to me: I’m more open to video calls than before. What about you? Reach out to the newcomer, even if she is not part of your team, to exchange pleasantries and learn more. Were you were contacted on LinkedIn by a stranger for a question about project management, or did you get a good comment in one of your posts? Write to the person to find out more. Are there some communities at work you can join? A project management community? Do you take part in extra work activities? What about organizing a virtual coffee break or a tea gathering? Don’t limit your network to your work colleagues or people only in your field. Take the opportunity of a training/virtual event to meet new people. That’s how personal growth occurs—through human interactions to feed your mind and get new perspectives. 3. What thing do you need to stop? There are many reasons to stop an activity. Perhaps you lost interest. Perhaps you don’t have time anymore. Maybe you don't feel at ease in the team, or the requirements and workload of the activity do not fit with your timetable. Stopping isn't a synonym for failure or lack of perseverance. It's better to be honest with yourself and avoid frustrations that can burst out. Acting on this will leave you more time to try out something new. By stepping back, you'll begin the year in a more positive mood and with confidence. Accept that you can't control everything. How do you define your objectives for the coming year? Share your comments below. |
5 Big Lessons Learned During 2021
Categories:
Lessons Learned
Categories: Lessons Learned
| by Dave Wakeman
Wow! That year went fast, didn’t it? I don’t know if 2021 was better or worse than 2020 because the collective sense of uncertainty was exchanged for moments of great hope that moved back to great uncertainty. I don’t bring that up to be a downer here in the period of annual reflection and resolutions, but as a way to introduce some of the ideas that really stuck with me in 2021 and that seem likely to help carry me—and, hopefully, you—forward into 2022 and beyond. Here are my five big lessons learned from 2021: 1. Planning is more important than ever: I took some time over the first two years of the pandemic to go back to school and study up on brand strategy, marketing strategy and corporate strategy. And, if you see a pattern there, you are paying attention because the pattern is that you have to know where you are going before you can start down the path to getting there. In the best of times, we get pulled in a lot of different directions, but during the last two years while the pandemic has been our companion, we’ve seen it become more difficult to find space to think—and for any of our actions to seem relevant. This makes going through the planning process even more important because we have to stop ourselves, slow down and think. That way we can actually do something productive with the limited amounts of focus many of us are struggling through right now. 2. Leadership counts: We’ve seen various forms of leadership around the world. Some good, some bad, and some that defy description. What we have seen in looking at all of these is that leaders matter. Leadership counts because most of the time, leaders are the ones that are helping us know what to focus on, where to put our efforts, or just help us make sense of a situation. In projects, this same idea applies because it can often be impossible to always know how our actions are going to play out in the larger sphere of a project without some guidance from our leaders. 3. Communicating effectively is key: I’ve spoken about how the message that the person receives matters more than the message you are delivering. That is something we see all day, every day right now. As PMs and leaders, you likely have a good idea about what you are trying to get across. Sometimes, the idea that you are expressing gets lost in translation. I think this is where the advice to talk to me like a third grader comes from. But the pandemic has highlighted the reality that the words you say can seem clear to you—but can be confusing to someone else for any number of reasons (like lack of a clear definition of the words, lack of a shared vocabulary around the problem, or cultural differences). The list of challenges to getting your point across is probably limitless, but our bigger challenge is to beat back on those challenges so that our message does get through. 4. The importance of a vision: I don’t know a lot of project managers that use the term “vision.” We do hear a lot of “vision statements,” but most of the time they are fluffy and confusing. (By “vision,” I mean direction, ambition, and a way of communicating your goals.) One of the big challenges that many countries have been dealing with during the pandemic is that there hasn’t been a really good vision for what ending the pandemic will look like. This lack of clear vision for success has made it easier for communications to be confused, leadership to look tepid and for life to feel like a bit of a free-for-all at times. You can call your vision an ambition. You can call it a definition of success. Or, you can call it something else entirely. The lesson I’ve learned is that if you don’t have one, it becomes easier for folks to act out of fear, panic or without a shared destination—causing more challenges than needed. 5. Ultimately, teamwork is a way forward: The biggest lesson I’ve learned is the power of teamwork. I did a podcast with the CEO of the Philadelphia 76ers, Scott O’Neil, back in June. We talked about being part of a team. Scott coaches his daughter’s basketball team and I coach my son’s soccer team. We got philosophical for a few minutes, but the big key that came out was that both of us like to be part of a team, and that being a teammate has great benefits. During 2021, I was reminded about this over and over as we saw teams work together to overcome big challenges—like the way that the vaccines were rolled out in communities across the United States. But I’ve also seen the breakdown of teams and how much damage bad team chemistry can do to the collective effort of a team, like the way that Juventus and Manchester United have often seemed like less than the sum of their parts. These are the lessons I’ve learned this year. By no means is this a comprehensive list, but it is mine. Let me know what you learned in the comments below. Happy new year!
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A parallel driver for indexing was the creation of universities, with Oxford being one of the earliest. Robert Grosseteste, a medieval English scholastic philosopher, taught at Oxford until his appointment as Bishop of Lincoln in 1235. Grosseteste read widely, and to help locate materials for his lectures, invented an indexing system based on symbols made up of curved and straight lines, circles, E-shapes, etc., which were added as annotations in each of his books. Different symbols represented different subjects, and in a separate general index he kept a record of where they were located. The result was a kind of parchment Google—once he's read and annotated a book, he knew where information on a subject was for future reference. This type of index is still called a general index.
