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Agile Australia 2009 Conference Report

I had the pleasure to attend Australia’s inaugural Agile Conference in Sydney supported by the Agile Alliance.  It was a 2 day event on 15-16 October.  Being the first Agile Conference in Australia, the key theme centered around Agile Adoption and how companies have adopted Agile; Why companies have adopted agile; and Issues and Challenges faced by companies in their adoption of Agile.

It was a very good conference with the ability to network and share ideas with other people during the breaks who are also working on their Agile adoption in their own companies.  I have taken some key messages from the conference to help with the Agile adoption initiatives I am working on within HP Enterprise Services.  I am already looking forward to next year’s event.

One of the more inspiring session I attended was the keynote on the 2nd day, Increasing Business value through simplicity (Lean and Agile) by Jeff Smith, CIO of Suncorp.  Jeff provided the Executive sponsorship and the vision for “Living Agile” as a way to infuse organisational simplicty into the DNA of Suncorp through the introduction of Agile and Lean principles and methodologies.  Any organisation would benefit having an Executive like Jeff to help drive their Agile adoption.  I highly recommend you watching this inspiring video!!

The other sessions I attended with some key summaries:

DAY 1

  1. Checkbook commitment doesn’t support organisational change management.  Executives provide checkbook commitment to Agile without actually supporting the Agile adoption (unengaged).  Same metrics are used and it continues the illiusion that software development is very deterministic.
  2. Culture doesn’t support change.  Governance is Conformance; Standard of work is static; detailed documentation; PMO are enforcers.
  3. Do not have retrospectives.  Or they are done, but actions that are identified are ignored or there is no action.
  4. Infrastructure to support the team is ignored or inadequate and architecture becomes unstable.
  5. Lack of full planning participation.  If the right people are not part of the planning you will not get the right commitment.
  6. No or too many product owners.
  7. Bad Scrum Masters.  Scrum Masters that are Command and Control.
  8. Not having an onsite evangelist/coach at remote teams.
  9. Team lacking authority.  Empowered teams amplify learning.
  10. Testing not pulled forward.
  11. Traditional performance appraisals that reward individual heroics.
  12. Revert to old ways of doing things.  Change is hard.

Day 2

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