Astronomy is one of those areas that always amazes me. I admit shamelessly that when my husband is watching a show at Discovery channel about Universe and theories related to cosmos, I never complain about changing the channel to watch something else.
One of the interesting theories is the Inflation theory. In a nutshell, Inflation theory tries to explain the rapid expansion of the Universe right after the Big Bang and how all of that slowed down to a more gradual expansion and start cooling down. The amazing part is that Inflation covers only the first seconds after Big Bang, because, as per the theory, the Universe doubled itself 100 times in 1032 of a second. To put it in perspective, it's like having a piece 1020 times smaller than a proton, and inflate it to a sphere about 10 cm across in about 15 x 1033 seconds. Because everything happens so fast, matter "freezes" and has no time to change, it just moves along. Amazing right?!!
That's where my simple brain stops understanding, so don't ask me more.
All this reminded me a Big Bang Agile Transformation on a relatively big organization. As my friend Anirban would say, "the point is made, no need to go on with the story anymore". But I want to write a bit more.
The first couple of months after the Big Boss comes up with the "need for Transformation", a lot of things happen very fast. Some people are let go. People kept behind go through a lot of trainings, meetings, contractors that don't know the current system come and start telling how to do things instead of the "old way". All this is so fast that "the matter" like projects, deliverables, people's mindset, technology, "old tools" and management style, have no time to catch up, so they just move along, without changing shape too much (maybe just a little bit). And then, the cooling down starts. Transformation continues but is not so strong and fast. Is more gradual and cool. This is the time when "old world" starts facing the "new world". This is where the changes happen, where mindset starts shifting, where teams start to create, where Gravity kicks in. The phase after this, is very important.
To go back to Universe, there are different theories where we will go from here. Look at 3 of them:
Any of these could happen on a Transformation process, and maybe more. At the end, we are on a Complex system where we can only progress with hypothesis.
I think that the Leaders of the organization are Accountable and Responsible for the next step. By now, their mindset, leadership style and organization Vision, must have followed all the steps as well. By now, they should be well aware of the Gravity they have created and what choices will keep the Transformation "Continue Forever" versus other options. This is where their maturity is put to test. This is where they will prove if they are strong leaders or just followers. Tough choices are required to make sure that the Transformation doesn't get timeboxed and put a deadline. Being soft, forgetting about the organization's Vision will only make all the effort a Fairytale, rather than a Successful story.
statcount
Sunday, 28 April 2013
Monday, 15 April 2013
We are a big coloring book
In the last couple of weeks I have:
- Resigned from my current job after going through some interviews and accepted one of the offers
- Heard the ninja song a lot of times
- Finally got a chance to take the Management 3.0, a 2 day training presented by Jason Little!
- Crashed Star Canada one evening and had dinner with some interesting people
- Went to Open Space Toronto and decided to lead a session
- Went for lunch/coffee with a lot of people that wanted to wish me farewell
- Went for dinner with some old friends
All of this, made me meet new people and connect closer with the people I already knew. Everyone new I met, has something new to bring in my life, something that not just will help me with what I do everyday, but also understand myself better. With everyone, I build relationships.
If we take a step back, all we do in our life is, we build relationships. I'd like to see a relationship as an outlined figure where both parties decide on the contouring and on the colors to use. I am sure that there are some people out there that do not want to have anything to do with me. We have probably outlined a difficult image and used a lot of black and blue inside. Adding some bright colors might be the next thing to do. I am also sure that there are some people out there that would like to spend more time with me, because we have painted our figure with a lot of pastel colors (do NOT add black and blue on these relationships, that's NOT the point!).
Every time we meet new people, we are faced with a new outlined figure and with options on what colors to use. Relationships are built with our family, people we work, people that prepare our coffee every morning at Tim Horton's, people we see everyday on the train, digital people we meet on Twitter or LinkedIn ....
All these relationships we have in our life, make us a big coloring book. It's up to us what figure to outline and what colors to use. Choose wisely, learn from the ones where you used black and blue, add to the ones with bright colors and your coloring book might become a great collection of beautiful figures.
- Resigned from my current job after going through some interviews and accepted one of the offers
- Heard the ninja song a lot of times
- Finally got a chance to take the Management 3.0, a 2 day training presented by Jason Little!
- Crashed Star Canada one evening and had dinner with some interesting people
- Went to Open Space Toronto and decided to lead a session
- Went for lunch/coffee with a lot of people that wanted to wish me farewell
- Went for dinner with some old friends
All of this, made me meet new people and connect closer with the people I already knew. Everyone new I met, has something new to bring in my life, something that not just will help me with what I do everyday, but also understand myself better. With everyone, I build relationships.
If we take a step back, all we do in our life is, we build relationships. I'd like to see a relationship as an outlined figure where both parties decide on the contouring and on the colors to use. I am sure that there are some people out there that do not want to have anything to do with me. We have probably outlined a difficult image and used a lot of black and blue inside. Adding some bright colors might be the next thing to do. I am also sure that there are some people out there that would like to spend more time with me, because we have painted our figure with a lot of pastel colors (do NOT add black and blue on these relationships, that's NOT the point!).
Every time we meet new people, we are faced with a new outlined figure and with options on what colors to use. Relationships are built with our family, people we work, people that prepare our coffee every morning at Tim Horton's, people we see everyday on the train, digital people we meet on Twitter or LinkedIn ....
All these relationships we have in our life, make us a big coloring book. It's up to us what figure to outline and what colors to use. Choose wisely, learn from the ones where you used black and blue, add to the ones with bright colors and your coloring book might become a great collection of beautiful figures.
Friday, 29 March 2013
Smarter, not faster
Last November, I was partially working on a "crazy" project. I say crazy because:
1- The initial scope of that project was presented as "Take this Excel spreadsheet and make it a web form.By the way, there are some macros"
2- 2 weeks in the project we found that the scope was much bigger. "By the way, we want to make some enhancements!". There was no Solution Designer looking into it, just developers. Nobody was doing anything to change the delivery date
While Business Analysts were trying to figure out what had to be done and trying to solve a lot of questions, Developers started coding. A lot of developers were contractors and we were paying them by hour. There was the need to keep them busy to justify their time. No matter what they were doing.
I asked the team to agree for a 3 days "developer hiatus" while Analyst could catch up with the requirements. My point was that developers were making technical and architectural decisions in a time when we didn't even know what was being asked. In the same time, we wanted to introduce Git as a new tool so, I thought, would be a good usage of the 3 days for developers to move the code to Git, set it up properly, get familiar with it and then pick up with what Analysts would have found.
It was a big NO from the Dev lead. Under the pressure to use the contractor's time on writing code for the project, he just couldn't accept the fact that developers would stop writing code. "They are developers, they write code, they don't wait for requirements. This is against being Agile!". Despite my argument that the decisions they were making now would create problems if the requirements would be asking for different technical decisions, despite the fact that Analysts asked for 3 days to catch up with where developers where, the "3 days hiatus" didn't go very far. What I was proposing (some sort of TDD) was never done before, was just unacceptable!
Fast forward, end of March, after pushing the deadline 2 times, having a lot of people joining that team and then moving on to other projects after a while, I was talking just the other day with one of the Analysts that has been on this project from the start. Here what she said:
-OMG Ardita, that 3 days that you asked for developers to stop, we should have asked for 1 week!! You have no idea how much trouble we have been going through. The requirements were not anymore what client was asking for, but what developers had already done. We were being pushed back and forth between client and developers to figure out how to get the maximum of what client was looking for on a feature that developers had already closed. They were so worried to spend some contractor hours, but they spent so much of our hours that were wasted in this ping-pong. We should not aim to be faster anymore, we should aim to be smarter on how we do things!
I thought my job was done!!
Yes, true, I did not really help them with that project, but, as far as I'm concerned, they now know how to think differently and sometime consider to Stop! TDD is the best Agile practice that my company needs now. It's not about coding fast, is about coding what is needed, is about being smart on what to code and when.
1- The initial scope of that project was presented as "Take this Excel spreadsheet and make it a web form.By the way, there are some macros"
2- 2 weeks in the project we found that the scope was much bigger. "By the way, we want to make some enhancements!". There was no Solution Designer looking into it, just developers. Nobody was doing anything to change the delivery date
While Business Analysts were trying to figure out what had to be done and trying to solve a lot of questions, Developers started coding. A lot of developers were contractors and we were paying them by hour. There was the need to keep them busy to justify their time. No matter what they were doing.
I asked the team to agree for a 3 days "developer hiatus" while Analyst could catch up with the requirements. My point was that developers were making technical and architectural decisions in a time when we didn't even know what was being asked. In the same time, we wanted to introduce Git as a new tool so, I thought, would be a good usage of the 3 days for developers to move the code to Git, set it up properly, get familiar with it and then pick up with what Analysts would have found.
Fast forward, end of March, after pushing the deadline 2 times, having a lot of people joining that team and then moving on to other projects after a while, I was talking just the other day with one of the Analysts that has been on this project from the start. Here what she said:
-OMG Ardita, that 3 days that you asked for developers to stop, we should have asked for 1 week!! You have no idea how much trouble we have been going through. The requirements were not anymore what client was asking for, but what developers had already done. We were being pushed back and forth between client and developers to figure out how to get the maximum of what client was looking for on a feature that developers had already closed. They were so worried to spend some contractor hours, but they spent so much of our hours that were wasted in this ping-pong. We should not aim to be faster anymore, we should aim to be smarter on how we do things!
I thought my job was done!!
Yes, true, I did not really help them with that project, but, as far as I'm concerned, they now know how to think differently and sometime consider to Stop! TDD is the best Agile practice that my company needs now. It's not about coding fast, is about coding what is needed, is about being smart on what to code and when.
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
Trip and Beyond
Last weekend I went to Agile and Beyond on Dearborn. Was good to go there with friends! Not just because it makes it easy to blend in the crowd with someone you know, but the road trip was fun too. I will talk a lot about the speakers here, but you should know I feel sort of hip to be friend with these guys (Jason Little (check out his LeanDog picture at the bottom), Andrew Annett and Sue Johnston). If there were sessions that I didn't vote high, it is their fault for being so up to date with things and make everything sound as something I had heard before. End Of Disclaimer.
(Here is us packed like sardines on a Mazda. You can see a bit of my shoulder here)
I want to write down some of the things I heard on the sessions I went, before I forget them.
Key note from Jim Benson rocked! I have to admit, one of the main reasons I went there was because Jim Benson was there :) I didn't expect him to be that tall!!And he IS like a puppet :))) He said a lot during the key note but here what I took away :
The first session I took was Matt Barcomb and Diane Zajac-Woodie. Really enjoyed it! I think Matt is a supernova, so keep an eye on him (I mean follow him on twitter @mattbarcomb or something, not literally look at him). Some of the key takeaways:
Then I did an hop'n pop between Bill Wagne session's and Carol Treat Morton and Renee Pinter.
From Bill Wagne:
Here is a picture of the exercise from their session
To understand this image, we first created a whole bunch of personas. Each card had a picture and some details about that person. Then, some of us pretended they were the client and decided to categorize which of these personas is the most important client to them. For us was Randy. From now on, every decision about the product is based on Randy's liking. If CEO comes and asks for changes, you tell them: Well, you might like purple font, but Randy doesn't!! It is a tool to keep focus and have everyone focused on the right outcome.
And then was Cheezy (Jeff Morgan is how the city of Cleveland taxes him and his boat). I have to say was the most animated session. He got 4 people (product owner, developer, tester and designer) all dressed up in fake hair, hats, glasses, boas and they got to play a bit of theater. They were boiling under all those accessories but you could tell they loved it!
The last session I could attend was Jean Tabaka. Loved it! She talked about the Mad World we live in (we actually heard the song), about the chaos we work at and Cynefin.
Two things I got from her:
Update: a picture of Jason with a LeanDog hat!
(Here is us packed like sardines on a Mazda. You can see a bit of my shoulder here)
I want to write down some of the things I heard on the sessions I went, before I forget them.
Key note from Jim Benson rocked! I have to admit, one of the main reasons I went there was because Jim Benson was there :) I didn't expect him to be that tall!!And he IS like a puppet :))) He said a lot during the key note but here what I took away :
- Rules kill awesome
- Optimize don't standardize
- Be nice
- DONE means it never comes back!
- Metrics are temporary convenience to prove a point
- Subjective well being of people is a metric
- For any bad feedback, write to David :)))
The first session I took was Matt Barcomb and Diane Zajac-Woodie. Really enjoyed it! I think Matt is a supernova, so keep an eye on him (I mean follow him on twitter @mattbarcomb or something, not literally look at him). Some of the key takeaways:
- Fund capacity from past spending. 95% of the spending can be predictable if teams are stable
- Lines of Value (instead of Line of Business). They are multi-role groups and need to have a form of team identity
- You might get an IT guy on the line of value (Devops idea)
- MVPs are not just code written that does nothing. They are like Zombies! They move and function, not very well but they do! :)
- To decide which option to chose for the next project/product, line up ~4 key factors that are important for a choice. Put some weight into each. Then give a weight to each option per each key factor, do some math and you will get the option that scores the highest based on the key factors. The funny thing is that the option that will float on top, might not be at all what we want to do, so we might decide to go with the second option anyway.
- To size stories, line them up on a long line as per their relative size. Then divide them in groups. 7 is a lot of groups. 3 are usually where to start, but when you mature, you can move to Big and Little groups.
Then I did an hop'n pop between Bill Wagne session's and Carol Treat Morton and Renee Pinter.
From Bill Wagne:
- They decided to track these key metrics: Total cards, Current velocity, Average card siz. Start calculation on first iteration
- After 2-3 iterations they found : nr of cards X average card size is what was delivered by almost every team. Outliers are the 40/ and up
- Key questions to ask: When will we finish? What is the cost?
- Start see the nr of new cards added per iteration
- Get product owners to look at the new additions, the trend and the effect. Start the conversation based on those
- Let Business Owners own the goals: Keep budget or Keep Features?
Here is a picture of the exercise from their session
To understand this image, we first created a whole bunch of personas. Each card had a picture and some details about that person. Then, some of us pretended they were the client and decided to categorize which of these personas is the most important client to them. For us was Randy. From now on, every decision about the product is based on Randy's liking. If CEO comes and asks for changes, you tell them: Well, you might like purple font, but Randy doesn't!! It is a tool to keep focus and have everyone focused on the right outcome.
And then was Cheezy (Jeff Morgan is how the city of Cleveland taxes him and his boat). I have to say was the most animated session. He got 4 people (product owner, developer, tester and designer) all dressed up in fake hair, hats, glasses, boas and they got to play a bit of theater. They were boiling under all those accessories but you could tell they loved it!
- Product owner is there to take the team to the highest possible value delivered AND decide what NOT to do!
- Team is there to deliver what Product owner asked, continue improving (Kaizen) and make sure the code is clean
- What do we do when we find a defect? We put it on a big defect system? NOOOO! We FIX it!
- Put the weight of the Earned Business Value on the card and we see how much value we add when we deliver same amount of points on the same time
- Experiment: Business analyst to report to Product owner. Product owner stays with team and answers questions and works on the backlog. Analysts go to meetings and bring info
- Specifications in Gherkin help with testing
- Developer comes on Validation stage, after Testing is written. What we Validate is not the code that developer wrote but the test cases that tester and PO wrote!
The last session I could attend was Jean Tabaka. Loved it! She talked about the Mad World we live in (we actually heard the song), about the chaos we work at and Cynefin.
Two things I got from her:
- Are you a chef or a receipt follower?
- Abductive logic
Update: a picture of Jason with a LeanDog hat!
Wednesday, 27 February 2013
Motivated or CTOs?
Lately, I am meeting a lot of people that see themselves as CTOs, meaning Chief Troublemaker Officer. When I speak with them, I sense they are motivated, with a lot of energy or drive or innovative ideas or desire or all of the above. Nevertheless, they have a sense of being the "black sheep" on their teams. Usually they think that their managers see them as "people that complain and bring bad vibe to the rest of the team", or "people that live in a bubble and don't understand that things are done in a certain way".
So what to do with these people?
For some managers who control humans, I can see how some of these people are CTO. They are the ones that question decisions, bring up issues, come up with ideas after something is decided, want to try new things when a decision is made on how to execute something, point out issues and make even other people on the team think twice before agreeing to do something or how to do something.
For some other managers that know how to control human energy, I can see how they can use the drive, desire and motivation of these people to create an environment where ideas are welcome even late, where passion and desire is understood as first step toward innovation, where they can use these people as examples to pull and lighten up other people in the team that are more reserved and quiet.
So, the management style does affect these people a lot. Under a manager they shine. Under another manager they are troublemakers. When seen as troublemakers, they usually close up, shut down and check out. They might continue working and finish tasks, but they are just your average employee, with a lot of potential to be a star employee. Who is an outstanding employee, anyway?
Is a motivated person an outstanding employee or just a troublemaker?
To go back to the management style, an outstanding employee might be someone that follows rules, executes what is told, once in a while has good ideas, respects hierarchy and respects others in the team. For another management style, an outstanding employee is someone that looks forward to challenges, is always in touch with the latest of the industry and wants to bring it all in the team, questions decisions in order to make everyone think of the best decision, has open attitude with others in the team and doesn't try to play nice but rather play strong.
These people are high risk, in the sense that they are talented but when they don't see themselves on the right place, they move on and you lose talent. One trick to lower this risk and keep them around is to keep them motivated, interested and focused on what they like to do even when they feel they are not appreciated. Communication techniques are very helpful here because they might help re-position them in front of their managers. Just by changing the way "the Trouble" is introduced, results might be different. It is important thought to start these healing techniques early, on the first sign of feeling a CTO. If it doesn't get taken care of, just like any other small problem that gets repressed instead of fixed, it becomes a big issue and sometimes not fixable. Humans are easily broken and relationships sometimes go to a point of no return and require drastic changes.
I read somewhere that 60% of the issues in a relationship are unfixable. You think you fixed them, it is all good for a while, but then they come back just like before. By switching to another relationship, you are just exchanging a set of 60% of issues with another set of 60% of issues. Make sure you pick a manager and a team that gives you 60% of the unfixable issues that you can handle. Try to work on your communication skills and stay motivated until a better solution comes easy to you.
So what to do with these people?
For some managers who control humans, I can see how some of these people are CTO. They are the ones that question decisions, bring up issues, come up with ideas after something is decided, want to try new things when a decision is made on how to execute something, point out issues and make even other people on the team think twice before agreeing to do something or how to do something.
For some other managers that know how to control human energy, I can see how they can use the drive, desire and motivation of these people to create an environment where ideas are welcome even late, where passion and desire is understood as first step toward innovation, where they can use these people as examples to pull and lighten up other people in the team that are more reserved and quiet.
So, the management style does affect these people a lot. Under a manager they shine. Under another manager they are troublemakers. When seen as troublemakers, they usually close up, shut down and check out. They might continue working and finish tasks, but they are just your average employee, with a lot of potential to be a star employee. Who is an outstanding employee, anyway?
Is a motivated person an outstanding employee or just a troublemaker?
To go back to the management style, an outstanding employee might be someone that follows rules, executes what is told, once in a while has good ideas, respects hierarchy and respects others in the team. For another management style, an outstanding employee is someone that looks forward to challenges, is always in touch with the latest of the industry and wants to bring it all in the team, questions decisions in order to make everyone think of the best decision, has open attitude with others in the team and doesn't try to play nice but rather play strong.
These people are high risk, in the sense that they are talented but when they don't see themselves on the right place, they move on and you lose talent. One trick to lower this risk and keep them around is to keep them motivated, interested and focused on what they like to do even when they feel they are not appreciated. Communication techniques are very helpful here because they might help re-position them in front of their managers. Just by changing the way "the Trouble" is introduced, results might be different. It is important thought to start these healing techniques early, on the first sign of feeling a CTO. If it doesn't get taken care of, just like any other small problem that gets repressed instead of fixed, it becomes a big issue and sometimes not fixable. Humans are easily broken and relationships sometimes go to a point of no return and require drastic changes.
I read somewhere that 60% of the issues in a relationship are unfixable. You think you fixed them, it is all good for a while, but then they come back just like before. By switching to another relationship, you are just exchanging a set of 60% of issues with another set of 60% of issues. Make sure you pick a manager and a team that gives you 60% of the unfixable issues that you can handle. Try to work on your communication skills and stay motivated until a better solution comes easy to you.
Wednesday, 13 February 2013
2 of my favorite tools
As a person that I have to work with all kind of people on all kind of roles, I have to come up with the right technique or tool at the right time. But just like any other handyman would tell you, there are some tools that are always with you and then there are some other tools that you know you have them but you need to go to the shed and dig down to find them.
The 2 tools that i have been using lately a lot are:
1- Ask "What is the acceptance criteria?". I am finding it amazing how many times I see a team working on a project where everyone understands the goal but very few can articulate the acceptance criteria. Sometimes, nobody. I am finding it very important to get the people to stop and understand what is that thing, that result that when reaches a specific value, we can call the project "Completed successfully". When they do stop and find this, there is usually an Aha moment and I feel my job is done
2- Circle and Soup exercise. I did write a blog before about this but I want to point it out again. It is very interesting to see how an issue is right away set to an outside circle but then when discussed and understood the actions to take, starts moving slowly toward center. It is very good to remove the "victim" stance and feel more in control and powerful on actions.
The 2 tools that i have been using lately a lot are:
1- Ask "What is the acceptance criteria?". I am finding it amazing how many times I see a team working on a project where everyone understands the goal but very few can articulate the acceptance criteria. Sometimes, nobody. I am finding it very important to get the people to stop and understand what is that thing, that result that when reaches a specific value, we can call the project "Completed successfully". When they do stop and find this, there is usually an Aha moment and I feel my job is done
2- Circle and Soup exercise. I did write a blog before about this but I want to point it out again. It is very interesting to see how an issue is right away set to an outside circle but then when discussed and understood the actions to take, starts moving slowly toward center. It is very good to remove the "victim" stance and feel more in control and powerful on actions.
Tuesday, 15 January 2013
Finding the True North for Quality Management
My official title during the last year has been " Quality Management Office Analyst". There are different interpretations to it. The word "Quality" does not help because the first thing people have in mind when they hear that word, is "Quality Assurance". When we say "Quality Management", we mean Processes, but it is like saying to someone "Don't think of an elephant" and actually expect that they won't have an elephant in their mind. I am saying all this because we have been struggling for a while to come to a consensus for our team Vision. We all seem to want the same thing and create the same target system, but someone is always coming up with a different variable that when injected in the previous system, it changes the target system. Is related with the theory of system hacking I guess.
On our team site, we have this blurb where we have tried to encapsulate what we are trying to do:
I guess it is not bad, but there is something there that doesn't make me (and some other people on my team) happy. We can't call this our "True North".
And that's where I got a Eureka! moment. Rather than adding to our Vision what we want our team to be, I thought to add to our Vision what we want the company to be. So, again, in a draft mode, fully aware of the need for cosmetic changes, I came up with something like this:
I am happy!! Why am I happy with this?
On our team site, we have this blurb where we have tried to encapsulate what we are trying to do:
"Our team is devoted to support continuous improvement in (insert here company name) product
delivery.Our goal is to improve customer satisfaction with reliable and
predictable product deliverables."
I guess it is not bad, but there is something there that doesn't make me (and some other people on my team) happy. We can't call this our "True North".
Last week, I was trying to pick my next book to read. I had two options, Toyota Kata and Management 3.0. While debating over them, Andrew Annett "pulled" me toward Toyota Kata. So, that has been the book I have been reading during the past week and I am somewhere in the middle. For all of you out there that have read this book, you know where my mind is right now. I am now in the process of comparing how we are doing things now in our company, and how Toyota is doing them. I know that Toyota is a Manufacturing company and we are an Insurance company. But Toyota's strength is not on dominating the Manufacturing market. Their strength is on the way they think, and that is a feature that is independent of the market, independent of the service, independent of the product that a company delivers.
This way of thinking, is drawing me back to the Vision of my team. I guess the easy thing is to take Toyota's vision and apply it to my team's:
Toyota: "Survive long term as a company by improving and evolving how we make good products for the customer"
My team: "Live long as a team that improves and evolves the process delivery of the company"
Although I know that this is just a draft and some cosmetic patting is required, I am still not happy with it. The problem is that we are looking at our team as a permanent team in this company, without an exit strategy. I know that a company needs continuous improvement and from that point of view, I can say that we should always be part of this company. But that statement gives me a sense of failure, not able to ever celebrate success. Makes me think we will never reach a desired target state, because there is always something to improve.I think that part of the continuous improvement is also the fact that my team, at some point, should not be required.
And that's where I got a Eureka! moment. Rather than adding to our Vision what we want our team to be, I thought to add to our Vision what we want the company to be. So, again, in a draft mode, fully aware of the need for cosmetic changes, I came up with something like this:
"Get (insert here company name) to a state where Continuous Improvement is natural element of the Vision of the company and all the structures in this organization"
I am happy!! Why am I happy with this?
I like the fact that we have:
- An end goal
- A way to measure the Success Criteria.
- A clear set of Recipients that will run with it, on their own, with a clear understanding on what to do
- It's recursive (ok, that's the geek in me!)
I like the fact that we want to create a Sustainable System, where the need for improvement will be organic, not injected from my team or any other external team. The mindset of Managers at any level will be on the Continuous Improvement of the current process, whatever that process is at any point of time.
Now let's see what others think. Feedback appreciated!
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