24 March 2009

Field notes from SEPG-NA 2009 - Tuesday

San Jose, CA. Day started (for me) @ 4:45am PDT (which my body believed to be 7:45am) with a work out, some email and chat, quick breakfast, and a teleconference with a prospective client. I arrived to the conference hall just as Dr. Paul Nielsen, CEO of SEI was introducing the first keynote, Scott Cook co-founder of Intuit Inc. (now chairman of the company's Executive Committee of the Board).

Intuit Impressive start-up story, but more impressive is their use and integration of TSP and Agile (Scrum).

He also told the old story about Chevrolet and Toyota in which Toyota ran a Chevrolet factory in this area using their production system keeping Chevrolet's UAW employees. Resulting in turning the worst plant in the company into the best Chevy plant in the entire company. Anyway, he probably spent too much time on that story. Unfortunately, too many people in these circles aren't professionals in process improvement to know that story -- which is now part of the process improvement lore.

Though he summarized TPS in an interesting way, saying that it's a process for rapid experimentation. I can see how he'd come to that conclusion considering the emphasis with TPS on Kaizen. He also spoke about the lack of process improvement in businesses who would desperately need it, like hospitals today in the USA. (I should note that UPMC is an exception in leading the way. Get with it everyone else!)

EMC-400 Jim Bampos, VP of Quality at EMC spoke as the next keynote. Turns out he was a toy tester for Milton Bradley when he was in kindergarten. Spoke about leveraging processes and process improvement to facilitate their Total Customer Experience ("TCE") program. The way I'd say the same thing — to my clients, not to correct Jim — is that it's necessary to connect process effort to business values and goals. Nice. Jim was up-front that they have no interest in CMMI appraisals, and he didn't know the CMMI appraisal lingo, which made the sincerity of their effort that much more obvious. He mentioned that after several months of process improvement effort and measurement, that despite having great data, it still didn't connect to their "TCE". Very poignant!

Very refreshing keynote in that he was brutally honest about quality and findings of their investigation into what drives customer experience and loyalty. They take process so seriously that they tie improvement to metrics, goals and bonuses.... FROM THE CEO on down! NOT process compliance or some crap like that, but their actual demonstrable process performance measures tied to money as a function of whether it supports their corporate goals — which are laser-focused on customer experience. EMC is looking to implement all three CMMI constellations. For good measure, he spoke about the fact that they're using agile practices all over the place.

Who's "pushing" them to do all this? NO ONE OTHER than themselves. Almost makes me want to work there. Almost.

In all, really great keynotes. Each SEPG conference should be so lucky.

Next up: CMMI or Agile: Why Not Embrace Both! Being led by Mike Konrad. Jeff Dalton, David and I joined Mike on stage. We stood because there weren't enough seats for the audience and the union wouldn't allow us to bring any more seats into the room due to capacity concerns. (In fact, a guy stood outside the room to prevent people from coming in. One such person blocked out was Alistair Cockburn, whom I went out to drag in despite the protests of the bouncer dude.) Mike reprised a presentation he'd done elsewhere summarizing the main points of our paper and adding some new material making a case for process discipline in a couple of engineering-related process areas of interest. The slide, here, is an idea David and I intend to "borrow" from, depicting, manifesto style, concepts we value from CMMI compared to other concepts possible from CMMI we value less.

Last for me for the day was an interesting perspective on CMMI and Innovation. Presenters' positions are that CMM started as something that would help organizations take revolutionary steps in innovative improvements as well as evolutionary steps and that while the model innovation-400still can support this, use of the model has been far from it. In addition, they discussed innovation as a process and then how CMMI could be enhanced, supplemented, or even "constellationed" into being more proactively in support of innovation. The speakers were very passionate about innovation. Props for that. Need more of it. They also posited that "maturity levels" for organizations using such a model would be superfluous and that what would matter most to anyone pursuing innovation would be business results. While I wholeheartedly endorse the idea of innovation as a pursuit to which processes can be applied, I was left wondering why *must* it be a CMMI? Maybe I'll be able to tag-up with one of the presenters to ask before week's out.

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11 November 2008

CMMI® or Agile: Why Not Embrace Both!

The third technical note to get started in 2008 is finally published with a cushion of 50 days left in the year!image

:-)

Yes, my friends, *the* paper we've all been waiting for has made it through the gauntlet of reviews and approvals at the SEI (which is, after all, still part of a major research university, CMU, so let's cut them some slack), and has been released!

This is likely the most fanfare it will get.  It's just not really their style, or mine, so it's rather suiting.

I would, however, like to put in appropriate props for my co-authors, Jeff Dalton, David Anderson, Mike Konrad, and Sandy Shrum.  They were a pleasure to work and collaborate with the entire time.  Despite not appearing at the top of the list, Mike and Sandy must own stock in the only thing worth any thing these days: midnight oil.  Thanks to them this paper even got out while the year still reads "2008".

Thanks also goes out to everyone with whom I've discussed the content of the paper, reviewed sections, and to my friends in Mt. Crested Butte, CO who provided great ideas back in September 2007.

Writing this entry from Mar del Plata, Argentina, where I've finished teaching the Introduction to CMMI Services Supplement earlier today and where the SEPG-LA starts tomorrow, and where I'm keynoting (now) on Thursday, is rather poetic to the whole episode:  Just another tick in the clock of time where I find myself away from home.  Working, teaching, speaking, and again amazed that I'm experiencing all of it.

Today, in the lobby, I met Edward James Olmos.  I'm sure I'll come up with some way to connect his latest hit to CMMI and Agile.  And, no, the SEI are not Cylons!  Nice try.  Read the paper.

Well, it's well past my bed time out here.  Busy days coming.

Peace to you.

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14 March 2008

Agile+CMMI Panel @ SEPG

Just thought I'd put in a quick plug for an impromptu addition to the SEPG North America line-up next week.

On Wednesday evening from about 5-7pm (or 1700h-1900h for our 24 hour friends) in a room to be determined, SEI is sponsoring a panel discussion on Agile+CMMI.

On the panel are expected to be the authors of the soon-to-be-published SEI Technical Report, CMMI or Agile: Why Not Embrace Both?!:
  • Mike Kondrad

  • Jeff Dalton

  • David Anderson, and

  • yours truly.

If you're planning to be at SEPG, keep an eye out for this session.  It may be posted/listed as a "Birds of a Feather" event.

Also, I'd like to put in a plug for a poster and a session being presented by my buddy Jeff.  His session, Notes from the Blgosphere, covers some more of the fun and interesting Q&A that he gets on his Blog.  The session is Wednesday 4:20PM in Room 22 & 23.  If you're looking to fill that time-slot, consider his session.

Safe travels!

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