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Today on the podcast, Dan Neumann is joined by a return guest, Christy Erbeck! Christy is a Principal Transformation Consultant at AgileThought and Certified Dare to Lead\\u2122 Facilitator. She has over 25 years of experience in domestic and international consulting; training and coaching; and working in both software development and non-product-focused environments, including manufacturing (discrete and process), distribution, and sales and marketing.
In this episode, they\\u2019ll be taking a look at a couple of different areas on the theme of agile by reviewing some questions from Quora.com! They start off discussing sprint retrospectives and how to make them more creative and fun; later shifting to discussing frameworks and which are appropriate where; and then lastly, they take a look at agile vs. waterfall.
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Key Takeaways
\\u201cHow does a Scrum Master make the sprint retrospective more creative and fun?\\u201d
Allow room for creativity by creating a safe environment through structure
Slowly introduce new ways to run the retrospective so the team can look at their work and interactions differently
Get to know your team \\u2014 the better you know them, the better you can adapt the retrospective to fit their needs
Use a method such as the Sailboat Retrospective to get the team outside of their regular 3-question retrospective
Try the \\u2018Genie Retrospective\\u2019 and \\u2018The Four Ls Retrospective\\u2019 (and don\\u2019t be afraid to customize them to make them your own, either!)
Read Agile Retrospectives: Making Good Teams Great, by Diana Larsen and Esther Derby for further insights on what makes a great retrospective
Seed the data for the retrospective
Check out TastyCupcakes.org, FunRetrospectives.com, and Retromat.org for further ideas for creative and fun retrospectives
\\u201cHow do we convince clients to use agile methods?\\u201d
Share case studies and stories from your own experience that illustrate the benefits that come from it
Explain the \\u201cwhy\\u201d
Meet them where they\\u2019re at
You can\\u2019t convince them; you need to help them uncover their own reasons for why they would want to adopt it so they can sell themselves on it
Dig into what isn\\u2019t working for them right now that agile would solve
Do a lot of listening about what their problems are
\\u201cWhat is the advantage of waterfall over agile?\\u201d
There is a time and a place for waterfall, depending on the project
It can be a great approach to solving a problem and getting a product out the door for simple projects that have a clear checklist
Remember: you can still apply an agile mindset to a waterfall project and an organization can use both approaches successfully
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Mentioned in this Episode:
Agile Retrospectives: Making Good Teams Great, by Esther Derby and Diana Larsen
FunRetrospectives.com
Stacey Complexity Model
Relentless Forward Progress: A Guide to Running Ultramarathons, by Bryon Powell
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Christy Erbeck\\u2019s Book Pick:
Master of One: Find and Focus on the Work You Were Created to Do, by Jordan Raynor
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Want to Learn More or Get in Touch?
Visit the website and catch up with all the episodes on AgileThought.com!
Email your thoughts or suggestions to Podcast@AgileThought.com or Tweet @AgileThought using #AgileThoughtPodcast!
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