Large-Scale Scrum (LeSS) is scaling framework created by Craig Larman and Bas Vodde. I Presented a case study on LeSS to PlayScrum-Pune user group on 7th Nov.
More with LeSS - An Introduction to Large Scale Scrum by Tim AbbottAgile ME
While there are multiple Scrum Scaling Frameworks, Large Scale Scrum is the leading framework for Scrum Scaling that truly drives success. More than just a prescription, we'll discuss the thinking and organizational tools as well as some of the practices that make LeSS truly unique.
This presentation gives an overview of the 4 approaches to Scaling Agile - Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe), Disciplined Agile Delivery (DAD), Large Scale Scrum (LeSS) and Scaling Agile at Spotify (SA@S).
Dev up 2016 Demystifying the scaled agile frameworkAngela Dugan
Just when companies seems to be warming up to agile, here comes SCALED agile. But how is SAFe really different than agile? Does using the SAFe framework undermine the scrum teams? Isn’t SAFe just a glorified version of waterfall that companies adopt when they can’t handle “real” agile? I decided the best solution was to go through the training and spend some time practicing it in the field. What I found was that SAFe leverages the best of Lean, Kanban, and scrum. SAFe is intended for large, enterprise customers delivering extremely complex and interdependent systems, but that doesn’t mean it offers nothing to smaller teams. Since becoming a Safe program consultant, I have coached a number of my smaller customers on improving their software development and delivery processes leveraging techniques from SAFe. In this interactive session, I plan to quickly walk through the tenets of SAFe, share some of my learnings with you, and help you to understand when and how SAFe can benefit your team!
More Agile and LeSS dysfunction - may 2015Rowan Bunning
Whilst becoming proficient at single-team Agile is not easy, scaling to many teams and possibly many sites adds many additional challenges.
Often these challenges include...
1. Water-Scrum-Fall
2. The 'contract game' and its misalignment with "customer collaboration over contract negotiation"
3. Release rigidity - inability to adjust scope and/or release timing in order to maximise value for money
4. Limited visibility and transparency
5. Dependency hell
6. Skills bottlenecks
7. Lack of cross-team learning
8. Lack of design and architectural alignment whilst avoiding 'ivory tower' architecture
9. Inability to resolve organisational mis-alignment issues outside of delivery teams
Not all frameworks marketed as Agile are designed to address these problems.
In this session, we will introduce Large-Scaled Scrum (LeSS) as an organisational design framework and illustrate how it provides solutions to problems that commonly lead to friction, deliver challenges and difficulties realising the benefits of Agile within large programs and product development efforts.
We will outline each organisational dysfunction / scaling challenge, and connect these with the elements of LeSS that avoid the dysfunction or greatly LeSSen the problem
First presented on 7 May 2015 at
Project Management Institute (PMI) Sydney Chapter Meetup
http://www.meetup.com/PMISydneyMeetup/events/219823489/
More with LeSS - An Introduction to Large Scale Scrum by Tim AbbottAgile ME
While there are multiple Scrum Scaling Frameworks, Large Scale Scrum is the leading framework for Scrum Scaling that truly drives success. More than just a prescription, we'll discuss the thinking and organizational tools as well as some of the practices that make LeSS truly unique.
This presentation gives an overview of the 4 approaches to Scaling Agile - Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe), Disciplined Agile Delivery (DAD), Large Scale Scrum (LeSS) and Scaling Agile at Spotify (SA@S).
Dev up 2016 Demystifying the scaled agile frameworkAngela Dugan
Just when companies seems to be warming up to agile, here comes SCALED agile. But how is SAFe really different than agile? Does using the SAFe framework undermine the scrum teams? Isn’t SAFe just a glorified version of waterfall that companies adopt when they can’t handle “real” agile? I decided the best solution was to go through the training and spend some time practicing it in the field. What I found was that SAFe leverages the best of Lean, Kanban, and scrum. SAFe is intended for large, enterprise customers delivering extremely complex and interdependent systems, but that doesn’t mean it offers nothing to smaller teams. Since becoming a Safe program consultant, I have coached a number of my smaller customers on improving their software development and delivery processes leveraging techniques from SAFe. In this interactive session, I plan to quickly walk through the tenets of SAFe, share some of my learnings with you, and help you to understand when and how SAFe can benefit your team!
More Agile and LeSS dysfunction - may 2015Rowan Bunning
Whilst becoming proficient at single-team Agile is not easy, scaling to many teams and possibly many sites adds many additional challenges.
Often these challenges include...
1. Water-Scrum-Fall
2. The 'contract game' and its misalignment with "customer collaboration over contract negotiation"
3. Release rigidity - inability to adjust scope and/or release timing in order to maximise value for money
4. Limited visibility and transparency
5. Dependency hell
6. Skills bottlenecks
7. Lack of cross-team learning
8. Lack of design and architectural alignment whilst avoiding 'ivory tower' architecture
9. Inability to resolve organisational mis-alignment issues outside of delivery teams
Not all frameworks marketed as Agile are designed to address these problems.
In this session, we will introduce Large-Scaled Scrum (LeSS) as an organisational design framework and illustrate how it provides solutions to problems that commonly lead to friction, deliver challenges and difficulties realising the benefits of Agile within large programs and product development efforts.
We will outline each organisational dysfunction / scaling challenge, and connect these with the elements of LeSS that avoid the dysfunction or greatly LeSSen the problem
First presented on 7 May 2015 at
Project Management Institute (PMI) Sydney Chapter Meetup
http://www.meetup.com/PMISydneyMeetup/events/219823489/
Deconstructing the scaled agile frameworkAngela Dugan
Delivered at the QAI Quest conference as a 90 minute workshop - With so many software delivery process frameworks and methodologies out there, it’s hard to know where to begin. And just when the industry seems to be warming up to agile, here comes SCALED agile with frameworks like SAFe, LESS, and a host of others. Should we all just be SAFe? But then maybe SAFe is just a glorified waterfall process for companies that “can’t handle real Agile”. SAFe, the Scaled Agile Framework, leverages the best of several well-established frameworks, including Lean, Kanban, and scrum. While SAFe is certainly intended for large, enterprise organizations delivering extremely complex and interdependent systems, many SAFe principles and practices can be used to improve much smaller teams. Join Angela in this workshop to gain a better understanding of the SAFe, and how teams can adopt SAFe principles and practices to improve the development, testing, and delivery of products.
What is scaling and how can it help to improve your organisation? What is the right mix of scaling principles and practices for your culture and teams? I will compare some agile approaches on scaling like Scaled Agile Framework aka SAFe, Large Scale Scrum (LeSS) both based on principles of Lean Product Development and Scaling Agile @ Spotify.
Foundations of the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe® ) 4.5netmind
El Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe) es una base de conocimientos para adoptar métodos de trabajo ágiles en grandes organizaciones. SAFe presenta de forma gráfica un modelo de gestión para escalar la aplicación de las prácticas ágiles de un equipo a la gestión de programas, y de la gestión de programas al conjunto de la organización.
Este modelo para la adopción y transformación ágil de las organizaciones fué diseñado por Dean Leffingwell, a partir de sus libros “Agile Software Requeriments: Lean Requeriments for Teams Programs and the Enterprise” y “Scaling Software Agility: Best Practices for Large Enterprise”, y se ha implementado con éxito en grandes organizaciones de todo el mundo. 60 de las 100 compañías más grandes de Estados Unidos están utilizando SAFe como guía de referencia para la adopción de Agile.
El modelo de gestión propuesto por SAFe cubre el conjunto de la organización, desde los equipos, hasta los niveles de mayor responsabilidad. El modelo estructura en tres niveles: Equipo, Programa y Portfolio, aunque en la última versión, SAFe 4.0, introduce un 4º nivel opcional para soluciones de extremadamente grandes y complejas. Para cada uno de estos niveles SAFe define los roles, estructuras, actividades, artefactos, prácticas y técnicas adecuadas.
AgileLIVE – Accelerate Enterprise Agile with the Scaled Agile Framework®: Part IVersionOne
Interested in finding out how to scale agile faster, easier and smarter using the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe)? If so, make sure you watch this two-part webinar series!
Scrum, XP, Kanban and related methods have been proven to provide step changes in productivity and quality for software teams. However, these methods do not have the native constructs necessary to scale across the enterprise. What the industry desperately needs is a solution that moves from a set of simplistic, disparate, development-centric methods, to a scalable, unified approach that addresses the complex constructs and additional stakeholders in the organization – and accelerates the realization of enterprise-class product or service initiatives via aligned and cooperative solution development.
Part I: Join Dean Leffingwell, software industry veteran and Lean Systems Society Fellow, for an overview of SAFe, a publicly–accessible knowledge base of proven lean and agile practices for enterprise-class software development.
Dean Leffingwell, software industry veteran and Lean Systems Society Fellow, has spent his career helping software teams achieve their goals. A renowned methodologist, author, coach, entrepreneur and executive, Dean's most recent project is the Scaled Agile Framework (scaledagileframework.com), a public-facing website which describes a comprehensive system for scaling lean and agile practices to the largest software enterprises.
Andy Powell is Product Evangelist for VersionOne and Scaled Agile Framework Program Consultant. During his 12-year career in the software development industry, Andy has assisted in numerous 500+ person agile tool rollouts with companies such as Siemens, Adobe, EMC and Sabre, giving him considerable experience in leading major projects. Andy received a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame and graduated magna cum laude.
Lee Cunningham is an Enterprise Agile Coach for VersionOne focused on agile program and portfolio management. Lee has trained and consulted with hundreds of teams in organizations of all sizes in the US, Canada and the UK. Lee served in the United States Air Force and earned a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from the University of North Florida.
Scrum vs SAFe | Differences Between Scrum and Scaled Agile Framework | EdurekaEdureka!
YouTube Link: https://youtu.be/c2e0BchglOc
** Certified Scrum Master Training: https://www.edureka.co/certified-scrum-master-certification-training **
This Edureka PPT on "Scrum vs SAFe" video will help you understand the key differences between the two most popular frameworks Scrum and Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe). The topics discussed in this course are listed below:
What is Scrum?
What is SAFe?
Major Differences Between Scrum and SAFe
Follow us to never miss an update in the future.
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/edurekaIN
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/edureka_learning/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/edurekaIN/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/edurekain
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/edureka
Castbox: https://castbox.fm/networks/505?country=in
Scaled Agile Framework in 10 minutes (CAS2015)Unai Roldán
Scaled Agile Framework in 10 minutes (SAFe 3.0)
- Scaled: SAFe is designed for large-scale software development ecosystems of 50-125 people who need to resolve inter-dependencies
- Agile: SAFe is based on 9 Lean-Agile principles
- Framework: SAFe is a collection of a proven efficacy tools, and you only have to use what you need
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vysQQx7pQzg
El objetivo de la Lightning Talk es dar una visión "light" pero completa de lo que propone Scaled Agile Framework 3.0 como marco de referencia para el escalado de Agile.
Scaled Agile Framework es uno de los marcos de referencia para escalado de Agile que mayor aceptación está teniendo a día de hoy, sobre todo cuando hablamos de grandes organizaciones. El marco SAFe parte de las capas de abstracción clásicas de una organización para estructurar un cambio de perspectiva y de cultura basándose en los 4 valores y 9 principios Lean-Agile, apoyándose además en las prácticas Scrum-XP de desarrollo de productos. En la charla descubriremos de manera rápida los roles, artefactos y ceremonias que plantea el marco para conseguir un cambio de paradigma sostenible en las organizaciones.
Unai Roldán
UST Global
Agile Project Management: From Agile Teams to Agile Organizations - Steve Mer...Agile Montréal
Agile Project Management: From Agile Teams to Agile Organizations
We will present the tools and strategies for adopting agile project management practices that connect business, management and delivery teams. We propose a framework that maintains an executive focus on managing investment and risk, introduces enterprise-level agile product development lifecycle and separates project governance from operational delivery while loosely coupling these activities.
À propos de Steve Mercier
Steve est un professionnel du développement de produits logiciels, comptant plus de 20 ans d’expérience. Il a développé et mis en place des lignes de production logicielles assurant une meilleure efficacité de livraison, une adhésion croissante aux meilleures pratiques définies et une qualité accrue des produits entraînant la satisfaction des clients. Il applique les méthodes de travail Agile au quotidien depuis bientôt 10 ans. Il aime les défis techniques, apprécie être responsable de livrer, avec des gens de talents, en équipe, des produits qui comptent vraiment. Au fil des années il s'est spécialisé dans les champs suivants: Bonnes pratiques de développement de logiciel, Intégration et livraison continue, Lignes de production logicielles, Infrastructure gérée comme du code, Méthodes Agile et amélioration continue. Il oeuvre en ce moment comme gestionnaire d’une équipe de 15 DevOps bourrés de talent chez Lightspeed.
À propos de Jean-Paul Chauvet
President, Lightspeed
With over 20 years' experience as a marketing and sales executive in the technology sector, JP has been a key element in the continued growth of Lightspeed. By developing and leading Lightspeed's product strategy, go-to-market direction and taking a direct approach to engaging independent businesses, he has helped Lightspeed increase revenue, strengthen partner relations and achieve success month over month.
Learn more about the most popular Agile framework - Scrum. This training should be paired with the pre-training learning materials in Trello. Learn more about the Scrum artifacts (product backlog, sprint backlog, etc.), Scrum roles (Scrum Master, Product Owner, and the team), and the Sprint.
Leading Large Scale Product Development with Large-Scale Scrum (LeSS)Kamlesh Ravlani
Organizations are frequently embarking on large scale product development initiatives involving hundreds, sometimes thousands of team members. Scale brings in additional complexity, non-linear behavior and risk. On the other hand, organizations are actively identifying ways to reduce hierarchies and reducing layers of middle management to become adaptive and agile.
Leaders leading large scale product development initiatives are seeking structure and process clarity to fail-proof their undertaking. Plethora of (Scrum) scaling frameworks and methodologies are trying to address these challenges. Some organically and others in more prescriptive way. In this session Kamlesh Ravlani discusses Large-Scale Scrum (LeSS) framework and how leaders can apply it to re-design and descale their organization to scale the value delivery.
Large-Scale Scrum is Scrum applied to many teams working on one product. Scrum is almost linearly scalable, hence LeSS framework elements are essentially the same as one team Scrum. LeSS is well balanced between empirical process control and defined elements to work with 2 to 8 teams. From my practical experience working on and leading multiple large scale product development initiatives, and LeSS framework, I'll share elements and practices useful for leaders to re-design the organizations and to enhance the focus on customer value.
Salesforce.com is an enterprise Cloud Computing Leader that specializes in Software as a Service. With several hundred teams working on our diverse product suite, releasing three times a year is not an easy endeavor. Our Agile processes are the key to our success. In this deck, learn the 5 fundamental elements of our successful enterprise implementation of Agile software development methodologies.
Illuminating the potential of Scrum by comparing LeSS with SAFeRowan Bunning
Scrum implementations have the characteristics of an iceberg. The tip of the iceberg is what is explicit in the Scrum Guide whilst the much larger mass under the waterline is deep adoption of the implications of Scrum and Lean. This is where far greater payoffs from Agile adoption are to be found. Unfortunately, few people are aware of many of the deep implications and far fewer have experienced a Scrum adoption that goes beyond the tip of the iceberg.
The recent articulation of LeSS and it’s contrast with SAFe is drawing attention to the difference between shallow and deep Scrum. This session will take you in a submersible below the waterline and use a spotlight to illuminate the vast potential to improve your organisation through deep Scrum.
In comparing LeSS with SAFe, we illuminate ways to…
1. Scale vertically, not just horizontally to help thousands pull together as one.
2. Reduce bureaucratic control and increase business-development collaboration.
3. Transform the win-lose contract game between business and IT into a win-win co-operative game.
4. Focus everyone on the end-customer and re-structure around this.
5. Produce a potentially shippable product increment every fortnight.
6. Enable the organisation to "turn on a dime, for a dime".
7. Enable anti-fragile self-optimising of both What customer value is created and How it is created.
8. Radically simplify organisational structure without the overheads of unnecessary specification, co-ordination and reporting roles.
9. Unleash the potential of real self-managing teams without this being unwittingly constrained.
10. Allow managers to shift from managing the what, the how and tracking to the much more impactful work of capability building.
Deconstructing the scaled agile frameworkAngela Dugan
Delivered at the QAI Quest conference as a 90 minute workshop - With so many software delivery process frameworks and methodologies out there, it’s hard to know where to begin. And just when the industry seems to be warming up to agile, here comes SCALED agile with frameworks like SAFe, LESS, and a host of others. Should we all just be SAFe? But then maybe SAFe is just a glorified waterfall process for companies that “can’t handle real Agile”. SAFe, the Scaled Agile Framework, leverages the best of several well-established frameworks, including Lean, Kanban, and scrum. While SAFe is certainly intended for large, enterprise organizations delivering extremely complex and interdependent systems, many SAFe principles and practices can be used to improve much smaller teams. Join Angela in this workshop to gain a better understanding of the SAFe, and how teams can adopt SAFe principles and practices to improve the development, testing, and delivery of products.
What is scaling and how can it help to improve your organisation? What is the right mix of scaling principles and practices for your culture and teams? I will compare some agile approaches on scaling like Scaled Agile Framework aka SAFe, Large Scale Scrum (LeSS) both based on principles of Lean Product Development and Scaling Agile @ Spotify.
Foundations of the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe® ) 4.5netmind
El Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe) es una base de conocimientos para adoptar métodos de trabajo ágiles en grandes organizaciones. SAFe presenta de forma gráfica un modelo de gestión para escalar la aplicación de las prácticas ágiles de un equipo a la gestión de programas, y de la gestión de programas al conjunto de la organización.
Este modelo para la adopción y transformación ágil de las organizaciones fué diseñado por Dean Leffingwell, a partir de sus libros “Agile Software Requeriments: Lean Requeriments for Teams Programs and the Enterprise” y “Scaling Software Agility: Best Practices for Large Enterprise”, y se ha implementado con éxito en grandes organizaciones de todo el mundo. 60 de las 100 compañías más grandes de Estados Unidos están utilizando SAFe como guía de referencia para la adopción de Agile.
El modelo de gestión propuesto por SAFe cubre el conjunto de la organización, desde los equipos, hasta los niveles de mayor responsabilidad. El modelo estructura en tres niveles: Equipo, Programa y Portfolio, aunque en la última versión, SAFe 4.0, introduce un 4º nivel opcional para soluciones de extremadamente grandes y complejas. Para cada uno de estos niveles SAFe define los roles, estructuras, actividades, artefactos, prácticas y técnicas adecuadas.
AgileLIVE – Accelerate Enterprise Agile with the Scaled Agile Framework®: Part IVersionOne
Interested in finding out how to scale agile faster, easier and smarter using the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe)? If so, make sure you watch this two-part webinar series!
Scrum, XP, Kanban and related methods have been proven to provide step changes in productivity and quality for software teams. However, these methods do not have the native constructs necessary to scale across the enterprise. What the industry desperately needs is a solution that moves from a set of simplistic, disparate, development-centric methods, to a scalable, unified approach that addresses the complex constructs and additional stakeholders in the organization – and accelerates the realization of enterprise-class product or service initiatives via aligned and cooperative solution development.
Part I: Join Dean Leffingwell, software industry veteran and Lean Systems Society Fellow, for an overview of SAFe, a publicly–accessible knowledge base of proven lean and agile practices for enterprise-class software development.
Dean Leffingwell, software industry veteran and Lean Systems Society Fellow, has spent his career helping software teams achieve their goals. A renowned methodologist, author, coach, entrepreneur and executive, Dean's most recent project is the Scaled Agile Framework (scaledagileframework.com), a public-facing website which describes a comprehensive system for scaling lean and agile practices to the largest software enterprises.
Andy Powell is Product Evangelist for VersionOne and Scaled Agile Framework Program Consultant. During his 12-year career in the software development industry, Andy has assisted in numerous 500+ person agile tool rollouts with companies such as Siemens, Adobe, EMC and Sabre, giving him considerable experience in leading major projects. Andy received a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame and graduated magna cum laude.
Lee Cunningham is an Enterprise Agile Coach for VersionOne focused on agile program and portfolio management. Lee has trained and consulted with hundreds of teams in organizations of all sizes in the US, Canada and the UK. Lee served in the United States Air Force and earned a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from the University of North Florida.
Scrum vs SAFe | Differences Between Scrum and Scaled Agile Framework | EdurekaEdureka!
YouTube Link: https://youtu.be/c2e0BchglOc
** Certified Scrum Master Training: https://www.edureka.co/certified-scrum-master-certification-training **
This Edureka PPT on "Scrum vs SAFe" video will help you understand the key differences between the two most popular frameworks Scrum and Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe). The topics discussed in this course are listed below:
What is Scrum?
What is SAFe?
Major Differences Between Scrum and SAFe
Follow us to never miss an update in the future.
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/edurekaIN
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/edureka_learning/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/edurekaIN/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/edurekain
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/edureka
Castbox: https://castbox.fm/networks/505?country=in
Scaled Agile Framework in 10 minutes (CAS2015)Unai Roldán
Scaled Agile Framework in 10 minutes (SAFe 3.0)
- Scaled: SAFe is designed for large-scale software development ecosystems of 50-125 people who need to resolve inter-dependencies
- Agile: SAFe is based on 9 Lean-Agile principles
- Framework: SAFe is a collection of a proven efficacy tools, and you only have to use what you need
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vysQQx7pQzg
El objetivo de la Lightning Talk es dar una visión "light" pero completa de lo que propone Scaled Agile Framework 3.0 como marco de referencia para el escalado de Agile.
Scaled Agile Framework es uno de los marcos de referencia para escalado de Agile que mayor aceptación está teniendo a día de hoy, sobre todo cuando hablamos de grandes organizaciones. El marco SAFe parte de las capas de abstracción clásicas de una organización para estructurar un cambio de perspectiva y de cultura basándose en los 4 valores y 9 principios Lean-Agile, apoyándose además en las prácticas Scrum-XP de desarrollo de productos. En la charla descubriremos de manera rápida los roles, artefactos y ceremonias que plantea el marco para conseguir un cambio de paradigma sostenible en las organizaciones.
Unai Roldán
UST Global
Agile Project Management: From Agile Teams to Agile Organizations - Steve Mer...Agile Montréal
Agile Project Management: From Agile Teams to Agile Organizations
We will present the tools and strategies for adopting agile project management practices that connect business, management and delivery teams. We propose a framework that maintains an executive focus on managing investment and risk, introduces enterprise-level agile product development lifecycle and separates project governance from operational delivery while loosely coupling these activities.
À propos de Steve Mercier
Steve est un professionnel du développement de produits logiciels, comptant plus de 20 ans d’expérience. Il a développé et mis en place des lignes de production logicielles assurant une meilleure efficacité de livraison, une adhésion croissante aux meilleures pratiques définies et une qualité accrue des produits entraînant la satisfaction des clients. Il applique les méthodes de travail Agile au quotidien depuis bientôt 10 ans. Il aime les défis techniques, apprécie être responsable de livrer, avec des gens de talents, en équipe, des produits qui comptent vraiment. Au fil des années il s'est spécialisé dans les champs suivants: Bonnes pratiques de développement de logiciel, Intégration et livraison continue, Lignes de production logicielles, Infrastructure gérée comme du code, Méthodes Agile et amélioration continue. Il oeuvre en ce moment comme gestionnaire d’une équipe de 15 DevOps bourrés de talent chez Lightspeed.
À propos de Jean-Paul Chauvet
President, Lightspeed
With over 20 years' experience as a marketing and sales executive in the technology sector, JP has been a key element in the continued growth of Lightspeed. By developing and leading Lightspeed's product strategy, go-to-market direction and taking a direct approach to engaging independent businesses, he has helped Lightspeed increase revenue, strengthen partner relations and achieve success month over month.
Learn more about the most popular Agile framework - Scrum. This training should be paired with the pre-training learning materials in Trello. Learn more about the Scrum artifacts (product backlog, sprint backlog, etc.), Scrum roles (Scrum Master, Product Owner, and the team), and the Sprint.
Leading Large Scale Product Development with Large-Scale Scrum (LeSS)Kamlesh Ravlani
Organizations are frequently embarking on large scale product development initiatives involving hundreds, sometimes thousands of team members. Scale brings in additional complexity, non-linear behavior and risk. On the other hand, organizations are actively identifying ways to reduce hierarchies and reducing layers of middle management to become adaptive and agile.
Leaders leading large scale product development initiatives are seeking structure and process clarity to fail-proof their undertaking. Plethora of (Scrum) scaling frameworks and methodologies are trying to address these challenges. Some organically and others in more prescriptive way. In this session Kamlesh Ravlani discusses Large-Scale Scrum (LeSS) framework and how leaders can apply it to re-design and descale their organization to scale the value delivery.
Large-Scale Scrum is Scrum applied to many teams working on one product. Scrum is almost linearly scalable, hence LeSS framework elements are essentially the same as one team Scrum. LeSS is well balanced between empirical process control and defined elements to work with 2 to 8 teams. From my practical experience working on and leading multiple large scale product development initiatives, and LeSS framework, I'll share elements and practices useful for leaders to re-design the organizations and to enhance the focus on customer value.
Salesforce.com is an enterprise Cloud Computing Leader that specializes in Software as a Service. With several hundred teams working on our diverse product suite, releasing three times a year is not an easy endeavor. Our Agile processes are the key to our success. In this deck, learn the 5 fundamental elements of our successful enterprise implementation of Agile software development methodologies.
Illuminating the potential of Scrum by comparing LeSS with SAFeRowan Bunning
Scrum implementations have the characteristics of an iceberg. The tip of the iceberg is what is explicit in the Scrum Guide whilst the much larger mass under the waterline is deep adoption of the implications of Scrum and Lean. This is where far greater payoffs from Agile adoption are to be found. Unfortunately, few people are aware of many of the deep implications and far fewer have experienced a Scrum adoption that goes beyond the tip of the iceberg.
The recent articulation of LeSS and it’s contrast with SAFe is drawing attention to the difference between shallow and deep Scrum. This session will take you in a submersible below the waterline and use a spotlight to illuminate the vast potential to improve your organisation through deep Scrum.
In comparing LeSS with SAFe, we illuminate ways to…
1. Scale vertically, not just horizontally to help thousands pull together as one.
2. Reduce bureaucratic control and increase business-development collaboration.
3. Transform the win-lose contract game between business and IT into a win-win co-operative game.
4. Focus everyone on the end-customer and re-structure around this.
5. Produce a potentially shippable product increment every fortnight.
6. Enable the organisation to "turn on a dime, for a dime".
7. Enable anti-fragile self-optimising of both What customer value is created and How it is created.
8. Radically simplify organisational structure without the overheads of unnecessary specification, co-ordination and reporting roles.
9. Unleash the potential of real self-managing teams without this being unwittingly constrained.
10. Allow managers to shift from managing the what, the how and tracking to the much more impactful work of capability building.
Agile development works well in small teams. But we encounter problems when Scrum is applied to other teams and the rest of the organisation. Large Scale Scrum (LeSS) can help. This slide deck explains why.
Why Scale? When choose each scaling approach? SAFe? LeSS? Enterprise Kanban? Other? Scaling experts will compare the different approaches, share from their experience and answer questions from the audience.
This is the LeSS section presented by Sagi Smolarski
Scrum as a foundational piece of SAFe(tm) - Give Thanks to Scrum 2016Yuval Yeret
As part of Give Thanks to Scrum's 2016 theme of "Scrum as a foundation for Agile Scaling approaches" Yuval Yeret and Dan Mezick explore how Scrum is a foundational piece of the Scaled Agile Framework(tm) and what is required in order to scale not just Scrum's practices but also its DNA and how SAFe approaches this challenge.
Do we really need to scale and if the answer is yes, then what? Do we focus on structure or delivery? In this presentation, Naveen helps us understand how LeSS helps in scaling when it is needed, while remaining true to scrum teams delivering shippable product increments at the end of every sprint.
20220923 - Vaidas Adomauskas - LeSS conference 2022.pptxVaidas Adomauskas
Revolut is known for its fast product development. Vaidas learned the way they work while leading Revolut Business. They did not "use LeSS". But for sure they used many practices that LeSS advocates for. When he joined Uncapped as a Chief Product Officer, he had a chance to build organizational structure, culture, and ways of working from scratch. Vaidas summarized it in this article early days of this journey. In this talk, he will share more details of the lessons learned, LeSS practices they used (without calling them LeSS), and why everyone willing to build a Unicorn should learn LeSS as early as possible.
20221013 - Vaidas Adomauskas - Agile Tour Vilnius 2022.pptxVaidas Adomauskas
Revolut is known for its fast product development. Vaidas learned the way they work while leading Revolut Business. They did not "use LeSS". But for sure they used many practices that LeSS advocates for. When he joined Uncapped as a Chief Product Officer, he had a chance to build organizational structure, culture, and ways of working from scratch. Vaidas summarized it in this article early days of this journey. In this talk, he will share more details of the lessons learned, LeSS practices they used (without calling them LeSS), and why everyone willing to build a Unicorn should learn LeSS as early as possible.
Tech Mahindra and CollabNet have worked together on a number of mission-critical projects, and over the course of their partnership have developed unique expertise in lifecycle, development-to-production metrics. Gain an understanding not only of what metrics are important, but also practical approaches to building reports and dashboards that deliver a single-pane view of all your delivery pipelines across the enterprise.
Participants will learn:
KPI’s of end-to-end dashboard driven development and delivery
Best practices for metrics in Agile / DevOps environments
Role of technology frameworks for integrated planning and reporting
Acceleration & Focus - A Simple Approach to Faster ExecutionProjectCon
#projectcon #agilecon
PROJECTCON | AGILECON Midwest 2019 in Indianapolis on May 10, 2019
Presenter: Michael Hannan
Acceleration & Focus - A Simple Approach to Faster Execution
Many articles & books emphasize the importance of focus to getting more done, but not many offer proven techniques to achieve big jumps in focus for entire teams—and thus accelerate the speed of execution dramatically. This session will provide a simple, common-sense method to achieve such acceleration for teams of any size, and at any scale.
Event Website: https://projectconevent.com
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/projectcon-llc
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ProjectConEvent
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/projectconevent
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLLG1SGPs1L5YLoFndvGGhQ
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/projectconevent
Presentation Slides: https://slideshare.com/projectcon
Post Event Trailer: https://youtu.be/1_RzFBnZ7bo
ProjectCon AgileCon Project Management
Agile is simple to understand but difficult to implement, hard to master and mind-boggling when trying to scale!
This is because many organisations start implementing Agile in a cultural context that is mostly non-Agile.
This creates a significant number of tensions and frictions that the teams adopting Agile have to deal with although they are often not fully aware of them.
This presentation discusses why implement Agile and what is Agile, it also talks about how to scale from a single team to multiple teams and the impact on organisational culture.
Similar to LeSS - Moving beyond single team scrum (20)
What is agile coaching
Scrum Mastery vs Agile Coaching
Professional Coaching Vs Agile Coaching
How to use coaching skills as an Agile Coach/ Scrum Master
Coaching Vs Coaching Conversation
Coaching Vs Mentoring
Practice Transformative Coaching
Practice Speed Mentoring
We often use Kanban to enable transparency within the Scrum either by using it for the product backlog, sprint backlog or the increment. There is no harm in using but think of eliminating the need for it rather managing artifacts with help of Kanban.
Developing a high-quality product using agile software development by ever-growing stakeholders' requirements has been challenging for many organizations. Setting a vision for the product and defining deliverables looks easy task from the outside. Let's explore what goes behind the scene, how teams manage requirements, prioritized it, and come with small increments to satisfy stakeholders. How teams’ approach to getting early feedback to minimize risks and maximize the value of work.
The Scrum Master role is misunderstood in many organizations and they perform poorly because people attempt to map Scrum Master role to an existing role such as Project Manager.
Maximize the value of your work by practicing DevOps with Scrum Framework. Building and deploy continuously within sprint with help of DevOps culture, tools and practices.
Discussion about Input and Output of every Scrum Events. Inside about what to inspect and adapt within these events. Entirely based on Scrum Guide and pretty much similar to PSM workshop.
Let's explore what is agile testing, how agile testing is different than traditional testing. What practices team has to adopt to have parallel testing and how to create your own test automation framework. Test automation frameworks using cucumber, selenium, junit, nunit, rspec, coded UI etc.
Behavior driven development - Deliver Value by CollaborationNaveen Kumar Singh
BDD, Specification By Examples, User Story Mapping, Impact Mapping. Presentation cover starting from Product Vision till Product Increment and living document. Behavior Driven Development using Gherkin, Cucumber, Java and Junit
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
Biological screening of herbal drugs: Introduction and Need for
Phyto-Pharmacological Screening, New Strategies for evaluating
Natural Products, In vitro evaluation techniques for Antioxidants, Antimicrobial and Anticancer drugs. In vivo evaluation techniques
for Anti-inflammatory, Antiulcer, Anticancer, Wound healing, Antidiabetic, Hepatoprotective, Cardio protective, Diuretics and
Antifertility, Toxicity studies as per OECD guidelines
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.