Difference between revisions of "Book - Scaling Lean and Agile - Thinking and Organizational Tools"
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Revision as of 04:34, 4 February 2009
ContentsAmazonScaling Lean & Agile Development: Thinking & Organizational Tools for Large-Scale Scrum
IntroductionReflecting our work over recent years, this text explores scaling lean and agile development with Large-Scale Scrum. It was written with my co-author Bas Vodde, who has long and in-depth experience with very large agile product development and enterprise transformations (at Nokia Networks and NSN), and like me, has worked in large embedded systems.
Companion Book: Practices for Scaling Lean & Agile DevelopmentThis book is related to a second companion book that explores the more concrete practices in scaling lean and agile product development: Practices for Scaling Lean & Agile Development: Successful Large, Multisite & Offshore Products with Large-Scale Scrum
Sample ChaptersDownload:
Table of Contents1. Introduction Thinking Tools2. Systems Thinking 3. Lean Thinking 4. Queueing Theory 5. False Dichotomies 6. Be Agile Organizational Tools7. Feature Teams 8. Teams 9. Requirement Areas 10. Organization (Organizational redesign) 11. Large-Scale Scrum Miscellany12. Scrum Primer Recommended Readings |
Errata
Page 44
Original: The English term ‘lean’ was chosen for the Toyota system—by MIT researchers of Toyota in The Machine That Changed the World [WJR90]—to contrast their lean production with the alternative of mass production.
Correction: The English term ‘lean’ was chosen for the Toyota system—and popularized by MIT researchers of Toyota in The Machine That Changed the World [WJR90]—to contrast their lean production with the alternative of mass production.
Comment: Subtle (unintentional) mis-attribution. Wikipedia: The term was first coined by John Krafcik in a Fall 1988 article, "Triumph of the Lean Production System," published in the Sloan Management Review and based on his master's thesis at the MIT Sloan School of Management. Krafcik had been a quality engineer in the Toyota-GM NUMMI joint venture in California before coming to MIT for MBA studies.
Page 79
Original: ...and starts to introduce cadence into system that had very little.
Correction: ...and starts to introduce cadence into a system that had very little.
Page 197
Original: And they create queues between the teams, which reduces the total cycle time...
Correction: And they create queues between the teams, which increases the total cycle time...
Comment: Mis-wording -> incorrect. OOPS!!!
Page 207
Original: ...decisions making method...
Correction: ...decision-making method...
Page 212
Original: Self-organizing, cross-functional, “resource balanced,” feature teams...
Correction: Self-organizing, cross-functional, “resource-balanced,” feature teams...
Comment: The Fowler brothers, first editors of the Concise Oxford Dictionary, wrote in their preface to the 1911 edition: We have also to admit that after trying hard at an early stage to arrive at some principle that should teach us when to separate, when to hyphen, and when to unite the parts of compound words, we had to abandon the attempt as hopeless, and welter in the prevailing chaos.