3. I want to bring a new perspective.
Agility on two levels:
• micro level (family and our day-to-day lives)
• middle level (where our jobs are – companies)
What agility means to me and why I think life is
agile.
Agility and Life
5. We all have a big desire to experiment and
even like the process itself.
When dealing with difficulties, our instinct is
to get up and move forward.
6. We are actually not that affected by the
results, we are affected by the reactions we
get from others when the results are not those
they wanted.
And that feeling kills the desire to experiment.
9. Focus on solutions:
“Don’t cry over spilled milk” - Dale Carnegie
Take responsibility of your actions. Deal with
the consequences.
10. Agile Manifesto:
“(….) our highest priority is to give value to
the customer through early and continuous
delivery”.
Who are the customers?
What does it mean value in our lives?
How do we give value?
11. In life our customers are ourselves, our
families, friends and those we interact with.
What do we want from our relationships?
What do we want our customers to become?
The answer to these questions will tell us
what VALUE is in our lives.
12. Joke: Mother to child.
“When you grow up, I would like you to be
a manager, to have many ideas, make a lot of
money and make good decisions every day.
But until then, you have to shut up and do as I
say cause I know best! ”
IT DOESN’T WORK THAT WAY. WE HAVE TO GIVE
VALUE EVERY DAY.
13. Do you have a long-term plan regarding your
relationships?
• our families
• friends
• children
Or do we react on the spot, without thinking
about consequences ?
14. In Agile there is a business responsible (PO).
• finding out what value means.
• optimize the ROI (Return Of Investment).
• make decisions every day: what’s
important and what not, orders the
features, talk to the team, finds out new
information.
15. TOUGH JOB!
All of us are the POs of our own lives.
When we know what value means to our
customers (family, friends, ourselves), when
we have the vision of the final product, it’s
much easier to take short term decisions.
16. He wanted to raise a child that trusted him and
that learned what responsibility means. And
knowing that, it was easy for him to make the
decision”.
Joel Peterson: expert in
Leadership and Negotiations.
His daughter negotiated with him
to get a hamster.
She is wining the negotiation
although he HATES hamsters.
WHY?
17. How do we decide what’s valuable to
us?
• Think
• Reflect
• Analyze
• No blaming
• Accept the facts and decide on the
actions
18. “No, that’s enough for me … I don’t
want perfection. These are good
enough.”
3) Pair of summer pants.
19. He was not willing to spend any more energy
and time for the benefit of perhaps finding
something better.
He had reached the ROI.
He was happy with the decision.
23. Agile teams need the courage to change things
even late in the process when finding better
ways.
In life most of the time we are afraid to leave
the things we are used to, even though we don’t
like them. They bring the false feeling of safety
and familiarity.
24. Our nature is to evolve, to learn and the most
natural thing is to have the courage to make the
first steps in the direction we want… but that
requires some experiments first, plus some
reflection and self analysis.
Courage
25. Fixed thinking:
• I’m born with certain abilities which don’t change.
• We are successful because we are smart.
• If we have difficulties in doing something, that’s
because we are NOT smart.
• judging.
• Constantly we have to show you are good.
• We don’t accept feedback, we look for excused and
we accuse others
Ways of Thinking – Carol Dweck
26. Growth thinking (agile thinking):
• I can learn anything.
• If I’m good at something that’s because I’ve put
effort into it, I worked towards becoming better.
• It’s not important where I am and what I do… I
can become better.
• I observe, ask questions, investigate, I am curious.
Ways of Thinking – Carol Dweck
27. We cannot think agile in all areas of our lives,
our entire life.
Agile thinking and fixed thinking are only roles
we take at different moments in our lives.
28. No matter how much we wait to learn before we
begin doing something, there will always be more
things to learn. We need to feel comfortable
recognizing that we don’t know it all.
“If someone offers you an amazing opportunity and
you’re not sure you can do it, say yes – and learn
how to do it later”.
Richard Branson – founder of Virgin Group
29. “If you want to become adept of any activity
involving change, innovation or creativity, you’ll
eventually face up the fact that edge discomfort is
part of your life. You’ll need to be OK with that. You
don’t want to learn to stretch painlessly. You want
to learn to accept the discomfort of an edge as a
condition of your work, a sign that you’re doing
OK.”
Jurgen Appelo - creative networker.
30. “What if I told you that those things you like about me
are the result of ALL my hobbies, would you still want
to end my game playing hobby?”
5) Playing games
31. We live in a ecosystem, where diversity is to
be appreciated as it is.
We are different and that’s the beauty of it.
Each one of us comes with a different view
of the things and we can share information.
32. • Diversity
• Same goal
• Share ideas, gain new perspectives
• Respect and appreciation
33. Do the same principles work? How do we apply
them?
Can we apply?
• experiment, supervised freedom
• trust, giving space
• responsibility
• decisiveness (enough)
• courage to change
• appreciate diversity
What about companies and teams?
34. John Shook, a LEAN guru, during Lean Conference
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wUpbbK104Zg
Experiment, supervised freedom, trust,
giving space
35. “Every time you tell people what to do,
you take the responsibility of that action
away from them”
LEAN philosophy
Responsibility
36. “The conductor doesn't make a sound” , so
he realized his job is to ”make others feel
powerful, make them feel they can do it; to
awaken possibility in others”
Ben Zander - conductor of Boston
Philarmonica
Trust, encouragement
37. John Shook, a LEAN guru, during Lean Conference
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wUpbbK104Zg
Leadership, Courage
38. Value:
“If you aren’t making difference in other
people’s lives, you shouldn’t be in business.
It’s that simple!!!!”
Richard Branson – founder of Virgin Group
39. “If I were to start my career all over again
… I’d still be a math teacher. I really love
being around kids and I like math.”
My mom – Retired math teacher
40. People change, they are capable of
transformation so give them:
• room to experiment, to learn
• encouragement, so they feel safe to
share ideas
• support
• help them develop as humans, so they
find out who they are, what they want
YOU CREATE AN INFINITY OF POSIBILITIES!
41. When we:
• accept diversity and experiments
• believe in ourselves
• have our priorities (jar of life) sorted out
Then we have the chance to grow old
and say:
• “It was hard, BUT If I were to do this all
over again, I’d still do what I did. ”