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Proven Lean Practices for IT, ITLN Forum – Sept. 21, 2012

Your invited to join OSU’s Center of Excellence- ITLN presentation with Jon Stahl, founder/CEO of Cleveland-based LeanDog

ITLN Forum – Sept. 21, 2012
1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Pfahl Hall 140, Fisher College of Business

Register at http://fisher.osu.edu/centers/coe/it-leadership-network

Stahl launched his software engineering firm in Cleveland after nearly two decades experience providing IT leadership in Fortune 500 and startup organizations. As he works with companies on Agile transformation and Lean management, Stahl’s passion is eliminating waste, optimizing team performance and helping organizations adopt process improvement values. An active leadership coach, instructor and speaker, Stahl also has co-founded a number of events in the Cleveland area, including Ignite Cleveland, Cleveland Startup Weekend and the Cleveland GiveCamp for IT Philanthropy. He is a Pittsburgh native and graduate of Ohio State University.

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QSM Associates, Columbus Executive Agile SIG, & COHAA Benchmarking Project Reveals Agile Development Advantage for Columbus, OH

Participation growing in first-ever industry study exploring disparity between local and global programming results
 
PITTSFIELD, Mass., August 28, 2012 – A first-of-its-kind study analyzing the Agile development practices of one programming community –in this case, Columbus, Ohio— reveals a level of achievement that far exceeded expectations of both the analysts and the participants. The study, being conducted by software productivity researchers QSM Associates in tandem with the Central Ohio Agile Association (COHAA), bodes well for adopters of Agile software development.
Despite some initial concerns by a few participants on how they might fare on industry comparisons, "the defect data were significantly better than industry averages," according to Michael Mah, managing partner of QSM Associates. Most installations expect an improvement in schedule when adopting new technologies like Agile, said Mah, "but the improvement in quality was striking."
Early results from the Columbus-area participants show that a typical business system comprising 50,000 lines of code is completed 31% faster than the industry average in the QSM industry database of completed projects (4.4 months vs. 6.4 industry average). Even more remarkable, said Mah, is the defect rate, which is 4x better than the industry norm.
Not all participants may achieve such extreme results, Mah cautioned, because not all participants have adopted all of the best practices that lead to success. The survey does show that concepts embraced by Agile deliver remarkable results in areas of compressing a schedule and reducing defects. Some of these approaches include acceptance-test-driven development (TDD), pair programming, and co-location, Mah said. But even participants that had not adopted all of these techniques achieved better-than-average results.
The QSM Associates expertise is providing the Columbus Agile community with valuable information on factual patterns on productivity and quality instead of anecdotal claims. Moreover, the data helps answer questions about addressing development projects schedules and budgets. "Aside from the value inherent in knowing the current status, the Columbus experience will be analyzed on current and future projects, and that experience will be reflected in a continuous improvement process," said Ben Blanquera, Curator, Columbus Executive Agile SIG. "Participants never stop learning about their own productivity gains when compared with industry practices. The benchmark, as important as it is, is just a starting point that will help establish the Columbus community as a hotbed for knowledge and experience in all manner of Agile development."
The study allows participants to objectively benchmark the organization's performance to create an initial productivity baseline. This enables companies to identify strategic directions and goals, and to focus their improvement efforts with optimal efficiency, Blanquera said.
"The early results of the Columbus Agile Benchmark Study are consistent with our experience at Nationwide," said Guru Vasudeva, Senior VP and Enterprise CTO. "The data from participating companies shows a strong pattern of productivity, fast time-to-market and low cost, along with an impressively low level of defects. The fact that our own results are consistent with a larger community, in both quality and productivity, adds credibility to the claims of Agile's benefits."
"Agile is maturing. And, as more companies increase their emphasis on Test Driven Development and perhaps Acceptance Test Driven Development, we can anticipate even greater improvements," said Vasudeva. "Within Nationwide, we are seeing significant improvement in productivity and quality thru Acceptance Test Driven Development."
Survey participants are able to see their own results contrasted with the industry at large; and, the Columbus community also compared the regional results in the aggregate with worldwide data. However, participants cannot identify the individual results of other companies, thus protecting the confidentiality of divisions or companies involved in the study. For this reason, Mah said, he has been able to confirm information that did not seem intuitive at first: for example, some successful Agile development shops are reversing the trend of outsourcing or "offshoring" some of their software development efforts.
"Outsourcing is proving to be an old-fashioned concept that might have worked well in old-line industries, such as manufacturing, but it is coming back to haunt new-age industries," said Bart Murphy, Treasurer of COHAA.
"Outsourcing or offshoring may make sense in an Industrial Economy based in cost-effective manufacturing," agreed Mah. "It is harder in an Information Economy when knowledge workers are trying to solve design challenges. And, now we have data to prove that. That being said, if companies do choose to outsource, benchmarking techniques serve a vital purpose in negotiation and relationship management."
The results from Columbus were aggregated into the SLIM software lifecycle management solution, which includes an industry-wide database of thousands of completed projects. SLIM allows "normal humans" to accomplish sophisticated analysis with ease, Mah said. Chief among the results is the fact that programming teams that are co-located tend to be more effective than those where expertise is geographically divided. This is one of the facts that have lead to the reassessment of outsourcing software development.
"Agile development has proven itself. In fact, we are now seeing some medium-to-large software shops actually repatriating programming resources that had been shipped to Asia or other countries, in what were considered strategic cost saving initiatives," observed COHAA's Murphy. "Although overseas development can sometimes bring dramatic schedule improvement, this often comes at a price: more defects. The cost to remediate and maintain the delivered work product outweigh the cost savings gained in the outsourced model, especially as offshore operating costs continue to rise." he added.
QSM Associates is accepting ongoing enrollments for companies that want to join the study, which will be continuous throughout 2012 and 2013. As an incentive to participate, companies receive a temporary use license of SLIM, a data capture template that captures key metrics for Agile projects, including stories, story points, time, effort, defects, velocity, and backlog.
Participants will receive a private, confidential analysis of their patterns along with the study results for the group.
QSM Associates has more than 30 years experience in helping Fortune 500 companies, and has access to the largest benchmarking database, comprising more than 10,000 projects, and believed to be the world's largest and most complete benchmarking database. The company, an affiliate of QSM, Inc., uses state-of-the-art measurement and estimation tools that are part of the QSM SLIM software lifecycle management suite.
About COHAA
The Central Ohio Agile Association (COHAA) is a non-profit group of IT and Business professionals dedicated to finding a better way to deliver software. COHAA promotes the use of Agile practices and principles in project management, software development, quality assurance, and business analysis with an emphasis on solution delivery. COHAA supports and promotes the adoption of Agile practices in software development and delivery, and acts as a resource for individuals and organizations that use, or are interested in using Agile frameworks and practices such as XP, SCRUM, TDD, FDD, Lean, & KANBAN.
About QSM Associates
QSM Associates, Inc. helps organizations measure, plan, estimate and control software projects. It offers the SLIM (Software Lifecycle Management) Suite of tools, so managers can benchmark and forecast Agile, waterfall, in-house, offshore/multi-shore or ERP/package implementation projects. SLIM contains statistics from a worldwide database of more than 10,000 completed projects, enabling productivity benchmarking on the desktop. Using SLIM to dynamically run "virtual project simulations,” companies can model and forecast waterfall and Agile releases to deliver on time, within budget with >90% estimation accuracy. SLIM can also derive ROI achieved by Agile methods and other process improvements. QSM Associates offers consulting, training, and coaching to help accelerate this capability. Information is available at www.QSMA.com or email info@qsma.com .
Michael Mah (Twitter: @MichaelCMah), Managing Partner is also the Benchmark Practice Director at the Cutter Consortium, a Boston-area IT think-tank. Along with Microsoft, Oracle, and Salesforce.com, QSMA is a Rally Software Strategic Partner.
# # #
QSM and SLIM are registered trademarks of Quantitative Software Management, which is headquartered in McLean, VA with partner offices and affiliates throughout the U.S., Europe and Asia.
Contact: Edward Bride, 413-442-7718 (Ed@edbride-pr.com)
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Free Agile Portfolio Management Webinar series

Is it possible to manage complex developments across multiple distributed groups? Yes!

Product portfolio management is not simply about identifying the most important things to create and then focusing on them. Portfolio and Program Managers need to also understand how this work must be managed across the responsible teams as well as how multiple projects or components come together prior to deployment.

Attend this Agile Portfolio Management Series webinar and hear industry expert, Alan Shalloway and Rally’s Ann Konkler discuss the:

•Real-life challenges of multiple, distributed projects and teams

•Use of shared backlogs to improve completion of work

•Effective collaboration across multiple teams

To attend visit:
http://forms.rallydev.com/2012-rpm-webinarseries?

Who should attend?
If you lead and manage Agile development teams, or feel that you need to transform to support these teams by integrating Agile practices and Lean principles, this is a must-attend webinar for you.

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Responsibility Process & Agile Leadership workshop with Christopher Avery – Columbus, Aug 23, 2012

Hot off his keynote presentation at The Path to Agility Conference, Christopher Avery is returning to Columbus to deliver a workshop to help you discover your internal Responsibility Process and coach others in these lessons. Extend your conference learning and improve your effectiveness and agility!

Less than 15 seats remain for this event! Don’t miss out!!!

For more information and to register, click here.

Field research about how personal responsibility works in the mind of leaders (i.e., how we avoid it and how we take it) now makes it possible for coaches and leaders to understand and teach the mental processes, language, and keys to personal responsibility. Doing so inspires your clients or team members to demonstrate far greater ownership behavior as individuals, and in teams and enterprises.

You will add more value as your team or clients take ownership; practice self-leadership; and learn, correct, and improve more easily, directly, and quickly.
This is a highly interactive and hands-on workshop. You will work directly with the Responsibility Process and the Keys to Responsibility. You will practice processes and exercises that Christopher and his Leadership Gift students apply with their teams and clients.

Outcomes
Acquire the basic tools and practices for coaching success with personal responsibility.
You will:

  • Leave with tools, activities, and exercises you can use to continually improve your ability to take and teach ownership behavior
  • Understand and explain the connection between ownership behavior and success in any pursuit
  • Understand and explain the essential role of ownership behavior (i.e., personal responsibility) in agile
  • Understand and explain why and how people avoid ownership, and why and how people take it
  • Understand why an agile coach would want to demonstrate, inspire, and teach ownership behavior
  • Understand, try on, and validate your mind’s internal Responsibility Process
  • Understand and practice the 3 Keys to Responsibility for unlocking and mastering the Responsibility Process
  • Evaluate your return on investment as a coach to adopt a personal Responsibility Practice for mastering responsibility
  • Evaluate and choose the basic tools to support your success practicing and teaching ownership behavior
  • Learn the A, B, C’s of teaching responsibility to anyone — what is required, and where the pitfalls are
  • Understand why giving advice seldom works (because it shifts the locus of ownership from advice-receiver to advice-giver)
  • Instructor: Christopher Avery
    Date: August 23, 2012
    Location: Quick Solutions, Inc.
    440 Polaris Parkway
    Suite 500
    Westerville, OH 43082
    Lunch and refreshments provided courtesy of Quick Solutions.

    For more information and to register, click here.

    About Christopher Avery
    Christopher is a sought-after, international speaker, author, and business advisor on responsible leadership, teamwork, and change for companies like GAP, Wells Fargo, and Ebay. Known for his cutting-edge work to demystify and then develop practical team leadership skills for engineers and other technical professionals, Christopher wrote the popular classic Teamwork Is An Individual Skill for everyone who is fed up with working in bad teams. Fortune magazine called it the only book on teamwork you need to read.

    As the visionary force behind the worldwide Leadership Gift community, Christopher applies groundbreaking discoveries about personal responsibility and performance to support leaders intent on rapidly building highly reliable, agile, sustainable, and accelerating teams and cultures.

    For more information and to register, click here.

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PMI Agile Certified Practitioner Workshop (PMI-ACP)

June 6, 7, & 8, 2012

Gartner predicts that 80% of all Software projects will be using Agile in the next couple of years.

This three day intensive review session is designed to assist the candidate in preparing for the PMI-ACP certification exam as well as understanding the scope and practices of Agile.

There will be link for preparation efforts to pass the PMI-ACP Exam and all areas will be covered in the PMI Agile Certified Practitioner Workshop.

For a full exam content outline, go to http://bit.ly/hzRRIL. All Participants will receive access to AgileExam.com and should take the full practice exam prior to the course then again after course completion.

REGISTER at:
http://pmi-acp-columbus-june2012.eventbrite.com/

Class will be held June 6, 7 & 8, 2012 at Franklin University’s Dublin Campus at 495 Metro Place South in Dublin, Ohio from 8:00 am to 5:00 pm daily.