Thank you to all who participated in the largest gathering to date, the Scrum Gathering Las Vegas. Looking forward to seeing everyone at the Global Scrum Gathering Paris. Registration is now OPEN.

Session presentations are now available for downloading. Check out the Presentation Tab.

Thank you to our Platinum sponsor SolutionsIQ, Silver sponsor VersionOne, and Bronze sponsors David Consulting Group, Agile Learning Labs, CollabNet, Platinum EdgeRippleRock, and PMI! Interested in becoming a Scrum Gathering sponsor? Contact Yvonne Dewar at ydewar@scrumalliance.org  

In the course of approximately 75 years, Las Vegas went from being a small stop along the westward pioneer trail to one of the most visited cities in the world. Almost 37 million people each year come to enjoy the rich entertainment and culture which Las Vegas has to offer. This vast tourism industry was not the work of one individual but rather many successful entrepreneurs who followed their passion-driven vision and, with some risk, turned it into a business.

An entrepreneur is an enterprising individual who builds capital through risk and/or initiative. Entrepreneurial Spirit, then, is the overall mindset and attitude of individuals which enables them to see opportunities; opportunities to create or rethink, engage or facilitate, opportunities to do or not do when it makes sense. Successful entrepreneurs have a vision for how they fit into the puzzle; they are able to choose or see the things that require their attention and dedicate themselves to achieving success at that level. They know how to serve their customers. Successful entrepreneurs are able to be transparent and honest, if not to everyone, most certainly to themselves.

When we think about what it takes to be successful in the world of work, there are certain values that come to mind: focus, commitment, courage, openness, respect. Scrum embodies these values by providing a framework of practices that help unite individuals with entrepreneurial spirit. Those who are successful with Scrum practice the art of the possible as they seek to collaborate more effectively. They look for opportunities and take appropriate risks. Ultimately, those with an entrepreneurial spirit inspect and adapt in order to transform the world of work.

This Gathering challenges you to "Up the Ante" on your Agile game. What would it take for you to go from good to great? What does an entrepreneurial spirit look like in your industry or organization? Where do you stand on the five core values and how might you develop competency in these to transform your world of work?

Each of the Scrum Values guides you down the path of self-discovery during this conference wherein the presenters help identify where you might "Up the Ante." Within each of these tracks is a level of competency and mastery represented by different standard poker chip levels: White $1 (entry), Blue $10 (intermediate), Black $100 (expert). These poker chip levels serve as a fun way to reference the intended level of the sessions within each track.  Please refer to them as you plan which sessions to attend.

Tracks

See The Future

Establishing a vision is the first step in understanding the future. Planning, focusing on value, delighting customers. Don't live in the past with teams and organizational dysfunction. Keep a mind toward the art of the possible. This is the "What" in terms of delivery. It also includes the bigger picture and includes topics on organizational development, coaching, product road mapping, and similar activities.

Build The Future

This is where we focus on "How" to create the valuable work product. We think about the elements of Scrum like the Daily Scrum, Scrum Roles, Sprint Backlog, etc. Topics for this track include activities throughout the Sprint: effective retrospectives, collaboration techniques, removing impediments, and others.

Tools of the Trade

Here we focus on the tools and techniques for engineering practices such as continuous integration, code refactoring, pair programming, and unit testing. These constitute the technical aspect of "How" when it comes to value delivery.

 


 

About Daniel Gullo, Chair of the Scrum Gathering Las Vegas

Daniel has extensive experience teaching, coaching, and consulting for organizations of many sizes. He specializes in Agile adoption and transformation from an enterprise perspective; that is, focusing on not just the practices (what and how) but the underlying culture and attitudes (why) which contribute to an organization's growth and maturity.

Daniel is the President of the Wilmington Chapter of the Agile Leadership Network and a frequent volunteer and speaker for the Agile Alliance and Scrum Alliance. He is the Conference Chair for the 2013 Scrum Gathering in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Daniel is a Certified Scrum Coach (CSC), Certified Scrum Practitioner (CSP), Certified Scrum Product Owner (CSPO), Certified Scrum Master (CSM), Agile Certified Professional (ACP), and PMP certified Project Manager. He is currently pursuing a Master of Science in Organizational Leadership and Development and is a candidate for the Certified Scrum Trainer (CST) credential.

 


 

Follow us on the social networks:

Twitter   Please use hashtag #sglas when tweeting about the Gathering.


Dates:

6-8 May 2013

Venue:

The Westin Las Vegas Hotel, Casino & Spa

Address:

160 East Flamingo Road

Las Vegas , NV 89109

Price:

Your registration gives you full access to all keynotes, sessions and special events. Breakfast, Lunch, and AM & PM breaks are included [Monday - Wednesday] plus any evening events. Regretfully, we cannot offer 1-day passes or allow sharing of passes.

Please be sure to read all the information below before beginning your registration.

Registration Type

Early Bird
(Ends April 8th, 2013)

Regular

Information

Member

$1,150

$1,350

Don't know if you are an active Scrum Alliance Member? Contact: support@scrumalliance.org

Non-Member

$1,400

$1,600

Not a Scrum Alliance Member? Sign up today and receive a 2-year subscription for only $100 USD

CST/CSC

$950

Discount code is required to receive the CST/CSC rate. Discount codes will be sent shortly from scrumgathering@scrumalliance.org

First-Time Attendee

$200 Off!

To receive First-Time Attendee discount code, please contact scrumgathering@scrumalliance.org

Academic

10% Discount

To receive the academic discount code, please contact:scrumgathering@scrumalliance.org

Group Discounts***

10% Discount

Groups of (3) or more enjoy a 10% discount, applied automatically off the total registration cost. Note: Registration and payment must be processed at the same time.

* All prices are in USD
** % Discounts are calculated based on the selected registration type fee.
*** Group discounts are calculated on the total cost of all registrations in the group. You will have the opportunity to add additional group members during this registration process. The total fees for all registrants in the group will be charged to the first person in the group's registration.

Download the official Program Guide

Table of Contents

 

 

 

 

 

Schedule @ a Glance


 

 

WHAT’S HAPPENING @ #sglas

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Welcome Reception

When: Sunday, May 5th - 18:00 – 19:00pm

Where: Casuarina Ballroom at the Westin Las Vegas

Vic Alejandro is not your ordinary stand-up comedian. He has the unique distinction of having 24 years of experience in Information Technology and 13 of those years in Project Management. He is also a Certified Scrum Master. In short, he is one of us! His humor covers project management, Scrum mastery, corporate anomalies and everyday life.

Vic has appeared on the Ellen DeGeneres Show, HBO, CBC, Fox Sports and is published in the book The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Jokes. His likeable and relatable style (and shiny head) will keep you mesmerized. What a hilarious way to kick off the Scrum Gathering Las Vegas! Check out Vic’s website, and plan on swinging by the Casuarina Ballroom when you arrive on Sunday.

 


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Networking Night @ Margaritaville!

When: Monday, May 6th – 18:00 – 20:00pm

Where: Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville Las Vegas - 3555 South Las Vegas Boulevard

Celebrate a great first day at the world-famous Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville. Just a short walk up to Las Vegas Blvd from the Westin Las Vegas, Scrum Alliance will provide great food and a couple of drinks while you enjoy a performance by one of the finest acoustic performers ever, Cliff Erickson!

His musical instincts are clearly portrayed in his original work along with his amazing ability to capture the passion evoked by countless cover tunes. His extraordinary talent on his signature 12-string acoustic guitar captivates his listeners as he takes them along on what has been best described as an “unparalleled musical excursion.” Top entertainer stars including Ringo Starr, Kenny Rogers, The Beach Boys, Wynonna Judd, and America have selected Cliff to open their show. Check out Cliff’s website, and we’ll see you there!

 


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Open Space: The Magic of Collaboration

When: Wednesday, May 8th

Where: Acacia Ballroom & Breakouts

What most challenges you and your organization? Through the Magic of Collaboration, we’ll spend the third day of the conference helping each other remove impediments and discover new tools and approaches to solve our real-world problems together.

Days one and two of the Scrum Gathering are all about great sessions. They’re about learning new things. On the third day of the Gathering, you’re invited to help our community realize untapped potential. In what ways can we up the ante on our use of Scrum? Perhaps you need help with a specific challenge you’re facing using Scrum at work to develop software with your team, or you have a fantastic idea for improving user stories. Maybe you have an idea you want to bounce off like-minded folks for using Scrum to help public schools or nonprofits in your community. Since you care about Scrum, you have the skills, insight, and experience that are essential to make it better. And if we up the ante, we might even be able to help the world outside of software. Regardless, we’ll help each other move Scrum forward.

Bring your ideas, concerns, and challenges.

Find your friends, mentors, and collaborators.

Leave with a plan, purpose, and even more passion for Scrum.

Facilitator: Adam Weisbart

Adam is a Certified Scrum Trainer and Agile Coach based in San Francisco, who is passionate about helping groups create spaces in which they can thrive together. He has created several training modules including Build Your Own Scrum, which is used by trainers around the world to teach Scrum from the back of the room. He's the creator of the viral video "Sh*t Bad Scrum Masters Say," the baker of Retrospective Cookies, and author of the upcoming book Agile Antipatterns: The Scrum Master's Guide to Traps, Tripwires, & Treachery. When he's not teaching for CollabNet, he's likely blogging at http://weisbart.com (where you can find out more about his projects), cycling some ridiculous distance on a hilly California road, or writing about himself in the third person.

 


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Scrum Alliance Meet & Greet

When: Daily from Monday - Wednesday

Where: The Loft

Want to know what Scrum Alliance have been up to and what it has in store for the community and future Scrum Gatherings? Drop by to chat with Managing Director, Carol McEwan, Scrum Alliance Board and staff members throughout the week.

 


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Scrum Coaches Clinic

When: Daily from Monday - Wednesday

Where: The Loft

Want some help with specific challenges you have encountered on your way to a more Agile way of working? Come to the Coaches Clinic where you can speak one-on-one with an experienced Agile Coach. We can help you find the right coach to discuss technical practices, organizational change, Scrum, Kanban, Agile Coaching as a career and many other topics.

The Coaches Clinic will be open each morning before the first session, during breaks and for an hour after conference sessions. You can make an appointment or just walk in. Look for the schedule board in the Clinic area. The Coaches Clinic is a service of the Certified Scrum Coach community.

Facilitator: Roger Brown

Roger Brown is an independent Agile Coach located in San Jose, CA, USA. He provides training, consulting and coaching services in Scrum, Kanban, and Enterprise Agile Adoption. His company website is www.AgileCrossing.com.

Roger is a member of the Scrum Alliance, the Agile Alliance, and the Agile Project Leadership Network (APLN). He's also a founding member of the Certified Scrum Coach program. He has organized Coaching Clinics at prior Scrum Gatherings and Agile2012.

A veteran software engineer, Roger has additional experience as technical project manager and people manager. He has worked with both large and small companies in many industries. His work experience includes Dartmouth College, Vicinity Corporation, Microsoft and TeleAtlas. His coaching experience includes many companies since 2004. Roger is focused on helping companies and individuals find their own best approaches to the use of Agile methods.

 


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Program

Keynotes

Opening Keynote, Jeff Sutherland

Jeff Sutherland is the co-creator of Scrum and a leading expert on how the framework has evolved to meet the needs of today’s business. The methodology he developed in 1993 and formalized in 1995 with Ken Schwaber has been adopted by the vast majority of software development companies around the world. But Jeff realized that the benefits of Scrum are not limited to software and product development. He has adapted this successful methodology to many other industries including: Finance, health care, government, higher education and communications.

Scrum: The Future of Work Scrum has been around for almost two decades, and has evolved, changed, and grown in those years, but its core insights and ideas have remained the same. We will take a look back at the origins of Scrum, explore how those early ideas continue to drive Scrum, describe the current tipping point as Scrum enters the mainstream, and look at Scrum’s future impact on the nature of work and the structure of organizations.



Tuesday Keynote, Bill Joiner

With the publication of the award-winning book, Leadership Agility, Bill Joiner has become an international thought leader on the subject of agile leadership.

Bill is a seasoned leadership and organization development consultant with over 30 years of experience working with companies based in the US, Canada, and Europe. He is President of ChangeWise, a Boston-area firm that partners with senior leaders to create high performing teams and transform leadership cultures. ChangeWise also provides workshops and action learning programs that enhance leadership agility.

Bill’s most recent articles are “How to Build an Agile Leader” and “Creating a Culture of Agile Leaders.” Bill earned his Doctorate in Organization Development at Harvard University. Some of his clients include Aetna, Bell Canada, Corning, EMC, Fidelity, Harvard Business School, IBM, McKinsey, MIT, Partners Health Care, Pfizer, Polaroid, Royal Canadian Mint, State Street, Travelers, and various federal agencies.

Leadership Agility

Scrum can transform software development teams in amazing ways. As Scrum takes hold and proves it worth, Agile practitioners see the opportunity for more. We need to develop agile organizations. To do this, we need a new kind of “leadership culture” at the senior and middle management levels. This is the innovation we need so our organizations can sustain continually renewed entrepreneurship and adaptability over the long term. But what does this kind of leadership look like in practical terms?

In this keynote, Bill Joiner will introduce us to three “levels” of leadership Agility that emerged from in-depth research on the leadership needed in today’s highly complex, rapidly changing business environment. Going beyond previous conceptions of agile leadership, he will introduce us to the rarely practiced “Catalyst” level of leadership agility and how it can be applied to the larger challenges posed by today’s Agile initiatives.

 



Closing Keynote, Alistair Cockburn

Dr. Alistair Cockburn was one of the original authors of the Manifesto for Agile Software Development. He also co-authored the Declaration of Inter-Dependence, organized the first Agile Development conference, served on the board of the Agile Alliance, co-created the Agile Project Leadership Network and the International Consortium for Agile.

Alistair is widely known for his work on object-oriented design and development, on use cases, for his invention of the Crystal family of methodologies, and his mastery of agile software development. He was voted one of the "The All-Time Top 150 i-Technology Heroes" in 2007.

Less widely known is that Alistair won his first award for poetry at age 40, got his PhD at age 50, broke a world record for master's swimming at the age of 55, holds five international patents on the design of flip-flops, speaks six languages, and created the Initial Response Technique massage and meditation form.

Pay to Learn, and Related Advanced Agile Strategies

The best agile developers use techniques and strategies not in the literature, even seeming sometimes to fly in the face of all things agile. This talk describes why those are great strategies, how to think about them, how to look for them. In terms of the Shu-Ha-Ri progression, this a reduction of Ri-level practice for Ha-level practitioners wanting to one-up their game, and points the way for Shu-level practitioners to get out of their Shu-box.

 


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Session Timetables

Monday, May 6th – AM Sessions

BREAKFAST – 8:00 – 9:00

WELCOME & OPENING KEYNOTE – 9:00 – 11:00

Welcome Remarks
Daniel Gullo & Carol McEwan

Opening Keynote
Scrum: The Future of Work Scrum
Jeff Sutherland

ROOM

Acacia Ballroom

AM BREAK – 11:00 – 11:30

60 MINUTE SESSIONS – 11:30 – 12:30

SESSION & SPEAKER

TRACK

ROOM

Advanced Discussion of StoryPoints for Project Management
Dan Rawsthorne

See The Future

Acacia A

Breaking Analysts: A Real-World Tale of Converting a Traditional Business Analyst into a Lover of Scrum
Leslie J. Morse

Build The Future

Acacia B

Removing Impediments with Drawings
Carlton Nettleton

Build The Future

Acacia C

Technical Practices: What Product Owners, ScrumMasters, and Managers Need To Know
Chet Hendrickson, Ron Jeffries

Build The Future

Acacia D

Fixes that fail
Dhaval Panchal, Valerie Morris

Build The Future

Paloverde A

Helping Dispersed Teams Bridge Time, Distance, and Culture
Michael Tardiff

Build The Future

Paloverde B

Agile Metrics: Velocity is NOT the Goal
Michael Norton

Build The Future

Mesquite 1-3

Mob Programming: A Whole Team Approach
Woody Zuill

Build The Future

Mesquite 4/5

 

Monday, May 6th – PM Sessions

LUNCH – 12:30 – 13:30

90 MINUTE SESSIONS – 13:30 – 15:00

SESSION & SPEAKER

TRACK

ROOM

Not Your Mother's Agile Transformation
Katrina Bales, Keely Killpack

See The Future

Acacia A

The Power of Observation
Jukka Lindström

Build The Future

Acacia B

Windows on Transformation: Four Pathways to Grow a More Agile Enterprise
Michael Spayd, Lyssa Adkins

See The Future

Acacia C

Integrating Systems Thinking into Enterprise Agile with the Lessons of Lean
Al Shalloway

Build The Future

Acacia D

Coach the hand your are dealt. A True Agile Approach to Coaching
John Miller

See The Future

Paloverde A

From 'Doing Scrum' to 'Being Agile': Transforming a Culture
Brad Swanson

See The Future

Paloverde A

Deliberate practices for Agile coaching
Yi LV

Build The Future

Mesquite 1-3

Metrics: How will you know if you're Gambling with Scrum?
Lonnie Weaver-Johnson, Kate Megaw

See The Future

Mesquite 4/5

PM BREAK – 15:00 – 15:30

90 MINUTE SESSIONS – 15:30 – 17:00

Fast Conversations
Jeff Lopez-Stuit

Build The Future

Acacia A

Managing Technical Debt
Fadi Stephan

Tools of the Future

Acacia B

Blueprint for the Future
Ron Jeffries

Build The Future

Acacia D

Agile Antipatterns: The Scrum Master's Guide to Traps, Tripwires, and Treachery
Adam Weisbart

Build The Future

Paloverde A

Giving Agile Teams the Roots to Grow and Wings to Fly
Dave Sharrock

See The Future

Paloverde B

Paging Dr. Scrum: Diagnosing Problems in the Agile Organization
Angela Druckman

See The Future

Mesquite 1-3

Agile Kaizen – Improvement Beyond Retrospectives
Angel Medinilla

Build The Future

Mesquite 4/5

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Tuesday, May 7th – AM Sessions

BREAKFAST – 8:00 – 9:00

90 MINUTE SESSIONS – 9:00 – 10:30

SESSION & SPEAKER

TRACK

ROOM

Wetware Craftsmanship – Improved Coaching Through Understanding the Mind
Brian Bozzuto, Hedge Devin

See The Future

Acacia A

Effective Scrum and High Quality Code  – It Is a Chicken and Egg Relationship
Rod Claar

Tools of the Future

Acacia B

Facilitation & Communication in Scrum Teams
Michele Sliger

Build The Future

Acacia C

The Agile CEO: Patterns, Principles and Practices
Charlie Rudd

See The Future

Acacia D

Practices of Great Product Owners
Bob Galen

Build The Future

Paloverde B

Using Organizational Design to go from Good to Great
Rachel Weston Rowell, Jenif Kochanowski

See The Future

Paloverde B

The Challenge of the next decade... Transforming Corporate Managers... into Agile Leaders
Dave Sharrock

See The Future

Mesquite 1-3

The ScrumMaster Maturity Model: How to Assess Your Effectiveness at Enabling Hyper-Productive Teams
Brian Rabon

See The Future

Mesquite 4/5

AM BREAK – 10:30 – 11:00

60 MINUTE SESSIONS – 11:00 – 12:00

Scrum + Program Management = LIKE
Stacy Gordon

See The Future

Acacia A

Global Attitudes towards Scrum implementation: The view from 3 Continents
Matt Sharpe

See The Future

Acacia B

Nonviolent Communication Role-play for Pacifying Scrum Retrospectives
Juan Banda

Build The Future

Acacia C

Designing Your Organization For Innovation
Jim Elvidge

See The Future

Acacia D

Don't gamble on user stories alone, specify by example!
David Bulkin, Mark Levison

Build The Future

Paloverde A

Get all players involved! Behaviour-Driven Development made easy
Alan Ettlin

Tools of the Future

Paloverde B

Plan to Re-Plan – Release Planning and Reforecasting
Jason Tanner

See The Future

Mesquite 1-3

Stop Gambling, Embrace Your Agile Superpowers
Jake Calabrese, Stephen Starkey

See The Future

Mesquite 4/5

 

Tuesday, May 7th – PM Sessions

LUNCH – 12:00 – 13:00

KEYNOTE – 13:00 – 14:30

Keynote
Leadership Agility
Bill Joiner

ROOM

Acacia Ballroom

PM BREAK – 14:30 – 15:00

30 MINUTE SESSIONS – 15:00 – 15:30

SESSION & SPEAKER

TRACK

ROOM

Looking at Agile-Scrum Metrics from a Human Perspective in a Balanced Scorecard
Sarvesh Shroff

Build The Future

Acacia A

It is all about system: How Scrum helps in the bigger picture
Sami Lilja

See The Future

Acacia B

Business Environment Coding Dojos
Fredrik Wendt

Tools of the Future

Acacia C

Process Increments – Towards better process improvement
Mohamed Amr, Amr Noaman

See The Future

Acacia D

The controversy of disempowering your bosses Challenges to gain management buy-in for implementation of agile development methods and how to overcome them
Ebba Kraemer

Build The Future

Paloverde A

Confessions of a New ScrumMaster
Natalie Warnert

Build The Future

Paloverde B

Scrum for Experimental Biologists at Bio-Rad Laboratories
Victoria Hall, Jonathan Kohn, Michael Urban, Kenneth Oh

Build The Future

Mesquite 1-3

Agile Project Management for Government: Agile adoption in the US and UK governments a comparative review
Brian Wernham

See The Future

Mesquite 4/5

90 MINUTE SESSIONS – 15:30 – 17:00

Break Down the Silos – Collaboration Techniques for Teams
Maria Matarelli, Dan Neumann

Build The Future

Acacia A

Optimus Prime is Cool: Organisational Transformation  and Transformer
Nigel Baker

See The Future

Acacia B

Large-scale Agile Program and Portfolio Management Using Scrum
Mike Cottmeyer

See The Future

Acacia C

Beyond the Flat Backlog: Story Mapping in Scrum
Jeff Patton

Tools of the Future

Acacia D

Making Scrum Stick in Regulated Industries
Laszlo Szalvay

See The Future

Paloverde A

My Team's a Train Wreck! Overcoming Real-life Team Dysfunctions
Jan Beaver

Build The Future

Paloverde B

Business Value Estimation
Chris Sims

See The Future

Mesquite 1-3

Growing ScrumMasters for the Future
Mark Summers, Helen Meek

Build The Future

Mesquite 4/5

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Wednesday, May 8th – Open Space

Title: The Magic of Collaboration

When: Wednesday, May 8th

Where: Acacia Ballroom & Breakouts

What most challenges you and your organization? Through the Magic of Collaboration, we’ll spend the third day of the conference helping each other remove impediments and discover new tools and approaches to solve our real-world problems together.

Days one and two of the Scrum Gathering are all about great sessions. They’re about learning new things. On the third day of the Gathering, you’re invited to help our community realize untapped potential. In what ways can we up the ante on our use of Scrum? Perhaps you need help with a specific challenge you’re facing using Scrum at work to develop software with your team, or you have a fantastic idea for improving user stories. Maybe you have an idea you want to bounce off like-minded folks for using Scrum to help public schools or nonprofits in your community. Since you care about Scrum, you have the skills, insight, and experience that are essential to make it better. And if we up the ante, we might even be able to help the world outside of software. Regardless, we’ll help each other move Scrum forward.

Bring your ideas, concerns, and challenges.

Find your friends, mentors, and collaborators.

Leave with a plan, purpose, and even more passion for Scrum.

Facilitator: Adam Weisbart

Adam is a Certified Scrum Trainer and Agile Coach based in San Francisco, who is passionate about helping groups create spaces in which they can thrive together. He has created several training modules including Build Your Own Scrum, which is used by trainers around the world to teach Scrum from the back of the room. He's the creator of the viral video "Sh*t Bad Scrum Masters Say," the baker of Retrospective Cookies, and author of the upcoming book Agile Antipatterns: The Scrum Master's Guide to Traps, Tripwires, & Treachery. When he's not teaching, he's likely blogging at http://weisbart.com (where you can find out more about his projects), cycling some ridiculous distance on a hilly California road, or writing about himself in the third person.

 


Session Descriptions

Monday, May 6th – AM Sessions – 60 MINUTE SESSIONS – 11:30 - 12:30

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Advanced Discussion of StoryPoints for Project Management

Dan Rawsthorne
Track: See The Future
Room: Acacia A

We know that StoryPoints are "a relative measure of size that can be applied to Stories and Epics." Beyond this simple statement there is not much about StoryPoints that we can all agree on - teams and organizations are free to estimate and use StoryPoints as they see fit. Well, I want to use them to aid in Project (not Sprint) Management, and in this talk I present a way to define StoryPoints for this purpose. Come and hear words like "Ideal Effort", "Intrinsic Difficulty", "Function Points", and "Earned Value", and how StoryPoints become the basic currency for Release budgeting and metrics.

Breaking Analysts: A Real-World Tale of Converting a Traditional Business Analyst into a Lover of Scrum

Leslie J. Morse
Track: Build The Future
Room: Acacia B

Team members that can perform proper Business Analysis are key to Scrum teams building valuable products that truly meet customer needs. "Breaking Analysts" will lead you through what your BAs are thinking when they first learn about Scrum and equip you with tactics & strategies for getting the light-bulb to come on and ultimately build a team of analysts that are willing and ready to go all-in.

Removing Impediments with Drawings

Carlton Nettleton
Track: Build The Future
Room: Acacia C

Pictures convey ideas more clearly and have a greater impact than a simple conversation. The ability to communicate, and perhaps sell, your ideas at a whiteboard is an essential skill for anyone on an Scrum team. In this hands-on session based on Dan Roam’s book, “The Back of the Napkin”, we will learn the six types of diagrams used in business and how to select the right picture for your problem. All you need for this session is an issue, your imagination and the ability to draw a circle, square, arrow and a stick figure. Come on - give this a try. It will be fun.

Technical Practices: What Product Owners, ScrumMasters, and Managers Need To Know

Chet Hendrickson,
Ron Jeffries

Track: Build The Future
Room: Acacia D

Successful iterative software development requires some well-known technical practices. Scrum traditionally leaves the discovery and implementation of the practices to the Development Team. However, we continue to see projects struggle due to the lack of good technical practices. In this session, we will give ScrumMasters, Product Owners, and other project Stakeholders the tools they need to understand whether their Development Teams are using the right technical practices, and how - and why - to influence them to improve.

Fixes that fail

Dhaval Panchal,
Valerie Morris

Track: Build The Future
Room: Paloverde A

Does your management use velocity as a weapon? Are you concerned about your product’s quality? How have you approached these systemic problems? This session is for those who recognize that symptomatic fixes will not address their core issues. For those interested in learning how to change the conversation with their management, this session will introduce basic systems thinking tools and walk through a case study of an agile organization that is beginning to appreciate the interconnectedness of velocity, quality, morale, revenue etc., in their ecosystem.

Helping Dispersed Teams Bridge Time, Distance, and Culture

Michael Tardiff
Track: Build The Future
Room: Paloverde B

"Our teams are distributed--that's just the way it is today." That's the refrain heard across widely dispersed organizations that seek to gain the benefits that Scrum offers. And sure enough, there are myriad situations where people who want to and need to work together have trouble *being* together physically.

This talk is an interactive exploration of the real-world ways teams that are separated can and do work together, with an emphasis on practical ways to bring teams and individuals closer, physically or virtually. Attendees will leave with real xamples and specific recommendations.

Agile Metrics: Velocity is NOT the Goal

Michael Norton
Track: Build The Future
Room: Mesquite 1-3

Velocity is one of the most commonly misused metrics on agile projects. We often focus on improving velocity without proper consideration for root causes. Learn about The Hawthorne Effect, Goodhart’s Law, and why setting goals for velocity can actually hurt a project’s chances of success. Take a look at what can negatively impact velocity, ways to stabilize fluctuating velocity, and methods to improve velocity without the risks. Leave with a toolkit of additional metrics that, coupled with velocity, give a better view of the project’s overall health.

Mob Programming: A Whole Team Approach

Woody Zuill
Track: See The Future
Room: Mesquite 4/5

Mob Programming is a Whole Team Approach to developing and coding software: The whole team works on the same thing, at the same time, in the same space, and at the same computer.

We've expanded on the idea of Pair Programming by including all team members, including QA and Product Owner, working together at the same time on all the work we do.

We have developed practices that allow all team members to contribute (or receive) value througout the day. This has been very productive for us, and has resulted in higher quality and more useful software.

Monday, May 6th – PM Sessions – 90 MINUTE SESSIONS – 13:30 - 15:00

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Not Your Mother's Agile Transformation

Katrina Bales, Keely Killpack
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia A

Join our fun, interactive learning session & leave with a whole new perspective on bringing agility to life in your teams. Leveraging a real world partnership between an Agile Coach & a Change Practitioner, we share via hands on exercises the power of change tools such as Unlearning as well as introduce a twist to the application of a well know product development model to gain human behavior insights necessary to realize true agile transformation. You can also expect opportunities to provide your insights, feedback & experiences. Leave with new ideas & techniques to help you See The Future!

The Power of Observation

Jukka Lindström
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Acacia B

“To observe without evaluating is the highest form of intelligence.” Jiddu Krishnamurti
Ability to observe and share observations is one of the most fundamental skills for coaches. Sharing observations increases awareness and empowerment in others to make their own decisions and take responsibility of the situation, where as sharing interpretations has potential for conflict or disempowerment.
How are your powers of observation?
The workshop is for both new and experienced coaches. Participants will learn self-awareness and observation techniques to help themselves and others.

Windows on Transformation: Four Pathways to Grow a More Agile Enterprise

Michael Spayd, Lyssa Adkins
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia C

It is easy to envision a more Agile enterprise, yet we have found as a community it is quite difficult to accomplish. The transformation process goes on in many dimensions, and unless we have a framework that helps us see from each of those perspectives, our efforts are much more likely to fall short. Based on Michael Spayd's upcoming book, Coaching the Agile Enterprise, this session will (literally) walk you through each of the four fundamental perspectives and the power and limitation of each. We will explore together approaches that are suitable to each perspective and how to activate them in your team, division or organization.

Integrating Systems Thinking into Enterprise Agile With the Lessons of Lean

Al Shalloway
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Acacia D

While Scrum and XP have become very popular in agile development shops, most companies adopting them run into challenges when they expand beyond a few teams. These challenges often fall into a common set of patterns. We believe these patterns of challenge are due to a lack of systems thinking—the process of understanding how things influence one another within a larger whole. Al Shalloway shares his ideas on how the agile community can move beyond its team-centric approach to adopt a more holistic, systems-based approach.

Systems thinking creates new opportunities to create substantially larger development teams that comprise hubs of development. These teams work interdependently with a common vision and context. Hubs create the structure and motivations for the teams and individuals to collaborate as a normal part of their daily work. This can reduce the amount of collaboration that the teams need to manage on their own. Lean-thinking is also introduced since its paradigm shift to the timing of the workflow provides insights into how to use systems thinking in software development.

Although not a panacea, systems thinking provides a better platform to solve enterprise-wide challenges because your organization learns to approach problem-solving holistically and avoid the trap of unintended consequences.

Coach the hand your are dealt. A True Agile Approach to Coaching

John Miller
Track: See The Future
Room:  Paloverde A

Are you taking an waterfall and linear approach to Agile adoption? Do we still think that approaches like "shock therapy" techniques truly empowers the Agile mindset? Share how to take a true Agile approach to your coaching and Agile transition? Does your coaching embody the Scrum values? Share an Agile coaching and adoption ideas that are are truly Agile. Explore ideas such as minimal viable change, pattern based coaching, coaching Sprints, and online coaching dashboards for customer transparency and collaboration. Coach the hand you by differentiating your coaching to where you teams are.

From 'Doing Scrum' to 'Being Agile': Transforming a Culture

Brad Swanson
Track: See The Future
Room:  Paloverde A

For many organizations, truly being agile (not just doing Scrum) requires a cultural transformation - much more than a Scrum 'adoption' or Agile 'transition'. We will describe John Kotter's 8-step model for leading change as a framework for Agile transformation. We will also share concrete techniques and lessons learned applying the model for a highly successful agile transformation within a large enterprise.

Deliberate practices for Agile coaching

Yi LV
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Mesquite 1-3

Scrum Masters, Agile coaches and Agile managers at all times coach individuals, teams, and organizations. Sometimes, the coaching is effective, while other times it is not. It feels like largely dependent on luck or external environment, but this is too important to leave it this way. Deliberate practices come into place to increase the coaching effectiveness. In this workshop, we shall learn what deliberate practice is, discover what coaching skills need deliberate practices, and co-create deliberate practices for some of those skills.

Metrics: How will you know if you're Gambling with Scrum?

Lonnie Weaver-Johnson, Kate Megaw
Track: See The Future
Room:  Mesquite 4/5

Many people wonder if their Scrum adoption is working the way they intended. After all, if we are changing our method how will we know if it is better than the previous method? How do we know if it is working? What are the measurements we can use? In this session we will look at the good ideas, the bad ideas, and new ideas.
This will be an interactive session where we will explore those questions, share answers, and discover some new ideas. In addition, gain some insights into how to explain this complicated topic to metrics hungry leaders.

Monday, May 6th – PM Sessions – 90 MINUTE SESSIONS – 15:30 - 17:00

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Fast Conversations

Jeff Lopez-Stuit
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Acacia A

When a team is figuring out how to approach a piece of work, it should obtain just enough understanding to commit to getting the work done along a path that everyone can stand behind. A fast conversation can help a team maintain enough understanding to work, and avoid wasting time and energy on details that may not be important for work to proceed. It also gives a team tools to check that everyone is on board with the approach, so that conversations don’t happen too fast for anyone.

Managing Technical Debt

Fadi Stephan
Track: Tools of the Future
Room:  Acacia B

Is your team constantly missing delivery dates? Is the velocity decreasing from sprint to sprint while the development costs are rising? These are all signs that you are mired in technical debt and probably on your way to bankruptcy or a complete system rewrite. Come learn how to measure the quality of your code base and determine the amount of your debt. Learn how to engage executives and get buy-in on a technical debt repayment plan that enables you to pay down your debt, refinance it to a low interest rate, increase the quality of your code and return to high productivity.

Blueprint for the Future

Ron Jeffries
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Acacia D

Scrum is doing well but not well enough. There are important challenges to Scrum, to Alliance, to Scrum practitioners. We'll review the current status of Scrum, then discuss challenges facing Scrum, facing the Scrum Alliance, and facing Scrum practitioners. We'll look at some key challenges in detail: we'll consider technical practices, product ownership, and estimation. We'll talk about continuous flow: is it a threat or an opportunity? We'll look at how to see these issues in our work, and what needs to be done about them.

Agile Antipatterns: The Scrum Master's Guide to Traps, Tripwires, and Treachery

Adam Weisbart
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Paloverde A

Knowing the basics of Scrum is essential for any team member, but out in the trenches, a good ScrumMaster must be ready to identify and deal with Agile Antipatterns quickly to help his team and organization move forward.

What’s an Agile Antipattern? Something that at first blush may seem useful, but in practice is usually harmful to an agile initiative. It’s important to be able to sniff these out since they can damage your organization, and are often slippery to catch.

You’ll leave this workshop with a set of powerful tools to help you defuse antipatterns in the field.

Giving Agile Teams the Roots to Grow and Wings to Fly

Dave Sharrock
Track: See The Future
Room:  Paloverde B

A strong, self-organizing agile team does not emerge by accident. Just as with the creation of a great product, a great team takes vision and leadership, and ultimately of course, ownership of that vision from within the team. This workshop is a step in handing over ownership of the vision to the team, helping set expectations, define what a great agile team looks like, and enabling the team to steer their way forwards, while recognizing when they veer from their plan. Come and find out how a team can avoid stagnating, and continue to grow together as a team.

Paging Dr. Scrum: Diagnosing Problems in the Agile Organization

Angela Druckman
Track: See The Future
Room:  Mesquite 1-3

“Our main problem doing Scrum is…” 
Agile coaches know that those new to Scrum often complete this sentence by describing symptoms rather than the root causes of their issues.  It's hard to solve a thorny problem when you are stuck in the middle of it. Enter the agile coach. Much like a physician, we are often called in to diagnose “disease” and create a “treatment plan”. In this session, for both internal agile coaches and those who work with external clients, we’ll learn techniques to get to the root causes of common problems with Scrum and help our clients see a way forward.

Agile Kaizen - Improvement Beyond Retrospectives

Angel Medinilla
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Mesquite 4/5

Let's face it: many companies are stuck at Continuous Improvement. Retrospectives are probably the only sign of a Kaizen culture, and frequently they end up with the same list of impediments that we had a year ago. And then what? Maybe we try some games and creativity exercises, but when it comes to actual improvement...Well, how was that saying about an old dog and new tricks?
This talk will show you new ways to look at the continuous improvement process at your company, starting with -yes- retrospectives, but going far beyond that: Change Management, Corporate Culture, Innovation...

Tuesday, May 7th – AM Sessions – 90 MINUTE SESSIONS – 9:00 - 10:30

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Wetware Craftsmanship - Improved Coaching Through Understanding the Mind

Brian Bozzuto, Hedge Devin
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia A

Organizations have developed an excessive focus on human beings as logical and emotionless beings - seeing us no differently than the computers on our desks - to the detriment of understanding and improving the way that people actually think. It’s time to commit ourselves to the craft of using our brain.
Learn how developments in neuroscience have given us insights into the inner workings of the mind, some reinforce coaching concepts that have been around for over a century, while others have novel implications on how to best utilize your most important, and very finite, resource: your mind.

Effective Scrum and High Quality Code - It Is a Chicken and Egg Relationship

Rod Claar
Track: Tools of the Future
Room:  Acacia B

Scrum is simple, but Scrum is Hard. Scrum is so simple that it can be explained in 20 minutes, but so hard that some teams are never effective. Other teams produce 3-10 times more business value than they did before. This talk will go into one of the main differences between under performing teams and very successful teams, the impact of Code Quality on the effectiveness of a Scrum team. You will learn about the business case for high quality code, establishing the business commitment to high quality code and the process and organization should use to deliver more business value faster.

Facilitation & Communication in Scrum Teams

Michele Sliger
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Acacia C

While traditional projects expect most communication to take the forms of email and manager-led meetings, Scrum projects expect teams to self-organize, collaborate and participate in decision-making. But what is self-organization? How does it work? This 90-minute workshop will focus on what it means to self-organize, how it occurs and how to help it along, and the hurdles that must be cleared in the process. See how the proper use of facilitation in Scrum meetings can be a key driver in the development of high-performing self-organizing teams.

The Agile CEO: Patterns, Principles and Practices

Charlie Rudd
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia D

There are plenty of questions about executive leadership that emerge as organizations go Agile but precious few answers to help guide the executives that sponsor, lead, and are responsible for the performance of these organizations. In addition, although these days it’s pretty clear what it means to be an Agile team, what it means to be an Agile organization is still quite murky. In this session, Charlie will open up a discussion about what an Agile organization might be and describe strategies for leading one—all from a business executive perspective.

Practices of Great Product Owners

Bob Galen
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Paloverde B

Arguably the most important role in a Scrum team is that of Product Owner. It’s also one of the most challenging of the Scrum roles. Part of that challenge is because many Product Owners are simply thrown into a Scrum team with little guidance, insufficient skill and time.
In this session, Bob Galen will explore the practices and techniques, focus points, and patterns of great Product Owners. We’ll explore the dynamics of well-balanced Product Backlogs, ways to focus towards quality & customer value, how to conduct powerful Sprint Reviews; while "leading with" vision and goal-setting.

Using Organizational Design to Go from Good to Great

Rachel Weston Rowell, Jenif Kochanowski
Track: See The Future
Room:  Paloverde B

Scrum adoption has transitioned from just transforming teams to transforming whole organizations. But how do we go about this transformation in a focused and valuable way? Based on our experience implementing transformations in multiple organizations, we will guide you through best practices for organizational design work. Learn how to leverage Jay Galbraith’s Star Model to design a great organization, and how to pair that with classic Scrum practices including clear definition of roles, ceremonies and artifacts within Sprints to execute flawlessly and keep learning.

The Challenge of the next decade... Transforming Corporate Managers... into Agile Leaders

Dave Sharrock
Track: See The Future
Room:  Mesquite 1-3

It seems that even if more than a century passed by since the invention of the Corporate structure and the hierarchical management, they are still the most adopted form of structure used today. How can this be? Are Corporate and Management outlasting any other technology and organisational evolution happened over the last 100 years? Or are we just having to deal with very resilient structures, which are hard to dismantle? Or did we ever even thought about challenging them? We think we have found some suitable answers, come and join us in experimenting with some new tools for leaders.

The ScrumMaster Maturity Model: How to Assess Your Effectiveness at Enabling Hyper-Productive Teams

Brian Rabon
Track: See The Future
Room:  Mesquite 4/5

This workshop will allow you to assess your effectiveness at enabling hyper-productive teams. Braintrust has developed a five-level maturity model for ScrumMasters to provide an assessment on where they are and, more importantly, identify steps to move further along the path. Come to this session and learn about this model and pick up some tips on how to enable the productivity that Agile and Scrum is designed to unleash.
This session is for the following individuals:
• ScrumMasters
• Agile Coaches (who will be coaching ScrumMasters)
• Leaders (who will be leading ScrumMasters)

Tuesday, May 7th – AM Sessions – 60 MINUTE SESSIONS – 11:00 - 12:00

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Scrum + Program Management = LIKE

Stacy Gordon
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia A

Salesforce.com program management leverages a social approach and social tools to enhance Scrum elements and artifacts.
Join us to discuss:
- A new approach to program management and how it fits into an agile, social work culture
- Program management’s value add within an agile methodology
- Social approach principles and best practices:  Optimize information flow, leverage the value of crowd wisdom, provide real-time visibility, optimize decision making, connect and accelerate to get work done, create an environment with ‘just enough’ structure.

Global Attitudes towards Scrum implementation: The view from 3 Continents

Matt Sharpe
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia B

Agile methods are well established and accepted in the software development industry here in the US, but this is not universally the case across the world. Using personal experience, anecdotes and learnings, I will outline some of the attitudes, perceptions and challenges of rolling out Scrum to digital development teams in organizations across 3 continents – in London, Dubai and Sydney. I will additionally discuss some of the strategies you can deploy to help bring stakeholders on board whilst being sensitive to any cultural nuances and differences.

Nonviolent Communication Role-play for Pacifying Scrum Retrospectives

Juan Banda
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Acacia C

Nonviolent Communication (NVC) is not only about not expressing physical and verbal violence but about being compassionate and feel empathy for others; this is a mindset that prepares the spirit for communicating with others respecting their feelings. Often times in retrospectives we see accusatory and aggressive behaviors that inhibit effective communication. Even more often violence is not evident but subtle, is not in what you say but in how you say it. This workshop will use a role-play for putting you in the position to experiment with NVC and learn how to run empathic retrospectives.

Designing Your Organization For Innovation

Jim Elvidge
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia D

If innovation is not part of your organizational DNA, you risk falling behind your competitors and demoralizing your best talent. Yet one can not create an innovative organization by declaring “Be Innovative!” Rather, it requires an environment of rich, challenging choices, free from common constraints. So how to get there? In this interactive session, Jim Elvidge outlines a path to innovation for your organization, from a deep examination of structures, culture, and leadership styles that may be barriers to free thinking, followed by an environment design approach and catalytic leadership.

Don't gamble on user stories alone, specify by example!

David Bulkin, Mark Levison
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Paloverde A

Traditional requirements approaches don’t work, but user stories and acceptance criteria are not enough.
So, what is the answer?
Testable examples (i.e. ATDD and BDD)!
Testable examples, sometimes called executable specifications, provide a lightweight, objective description of a need.  They serve as a common language across roles, from business to the development team, allowing us to understand and improve our business rules.  As an added benefit they can even be used to automate acceptance level testing.
So, don’t gamble on your requirements, come to this session!

Get all players involved! Behaviour-Driven Development made easy

Alan Ettlin
Track: Tools of the Future
Room:  Paloverde B

BDD is a technique which has the potential to significantly promote the integration of project teams across disciplines and backgrounds. Sadly, the tool-chains available today are highly development-centric and primarily usable by tech-savvy project participants. To realise the full potential of BDD a new interaction paradigm is required which truly involves business stakeholders (e.g. many typical Product Owners). In the session a prototype of a BDD IDE is presented and discussed with the audience which strives to remove the gap and has the potential to change the way we interact in projects.

Plan to Re-Plan - Release Planning and Reforecasting

Jason Tanner
Track: See The Future
Room:  Mesquite 1-3

"Are you done yet?"
"When will you be done?"
"What are you shipping in the next release?"
Product owners and Scrum teams frequently need to answer these questions. In this hands-on workshop, attendees will learn fundamental release planning techniques to answer all of these questions and more. Through a fun, easy simulation, you will have an opportunity to determine a minimum viable product, plan a release, and reforecast the release based on the team’s results and changing business conditions.

Stop Gambling, Embrace Your Agile Superpowers

Jake Calabrese, Stephen Starkey
Track: See The Future
Room:  Mesquite 4/5

The most important part of agile is people.  Being agile often seems elusive, like a jackpot in Vegas or a Bigfoot. What can you do to be more agile?  Agile coaching, managing, and leading require more than just agile tools and practices. What are agile superpowers? How can powers like Deep Democracy, Curiosity, and others help you and the teams you work with? How can you activate your powers?  We dig into these questions in a live, interactive workshop where you can learn (verbal and non-verbal) and apply agile superpowers to agile challenges.

Tuesday, May 7th – PM Sessions – 30 MINUTE SESSIONS – 15:00 - 15:30

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Looking at Agile-Scrum Metrics from a Human Perspective in a Balanced Scorecard

Sarvesh Shroff
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Acacia A

Tracking any one aspect of Return over Investment, may favor short term gains over long term value creation. The Scrum primer says, “Waterfall methodology has one great weakness: Humans are involved”. As Scrum embraces this human perspective, it is important to capture the “human” metrics and present them along with traditional ones in a Balanced scorecard to display their inter dependencies to give a holistic picture of the ROI. The paper also attempts to refute that existing Agile metrics are just age-old CMMI/ISO metrics in a new Agile bottle, by modifying their usage to suit Agile needs

It is all about system: How Scrum helps in the bigger picture

Sami Lilja
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia B

Scrum creates transparency, makes continuous improvement and delivers value to customer. These noble goals are often difficult to reach, causing frustration to teams, Scrum Masters and anyone in the organization.
Most often the reason is that surrounding organization, the system, does not allow effective use of Scrum. As W. Edwards Deming said: "A bad system will defeat a good person every time". Similarly, a bad system will defeat a good process framework.
This session shows how the surrounding system impacts Scrum teams an how Scrum can be used to change the entire system for better

Business Environment Coding Dojos

Fredrik Wendt
Track: Tools of the Future
Room:  Acacia C

This talk is about what works in a corporate environment Coding Dojo - it's not experiences from your typical Meetup or user group where most attendees already share some of the craftsmanship passion and practice katas on their own, off work hours.
Fredrik has facilitated over 50 sessions the past two years with 11 clients in different industries, and will share not only his experiences, do's and don'ts (and why) but also participants' experiences and subjective results.

Process Increments - Towards better process improvement

Mohamed Amr, Amr Noaman
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia D

Process Increments, is an iterative approach to manage process improvement projects. This approach builds upon Agile values and principles, and reuses well known Agile techniques. This approach partitions the scope into user-story-like increments, and manages the project using agile project management techniques.
This session will introduce the concept of Process Increments and provide different contexts and factors where Process Increments can be applied successfully.

The controversy of disempowering your bosses Challenges to gain management buy-in for implementation of agile development methods and how to overcome them

Ebba Kraemer
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Paloverde A

A former management consultant from the Boston Consulting Group with experience from advising (and receiving push-back from) senior management within development organizations points out likely reasons for why the world wide roll-out of agile development methods is hampered by  resistance from senior management in many organizations.
The underlying reasons for the management’s skepticism are explored and ideas of how to address these concerns are presented.

Confessions of a New ScrumMaster

Natalie Warnert
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Paloverde B

You just finished your CSM class, overflowing with your newfound Scrum knowledge and renewed faith in software development practices. You're ecstatic to share your new view of the world and to show how Scrum can benefit your organization.  But, upon your first Scrum project you meet resistance, opposition, and worst of all, modified Scrum practices. What's a ScrumMaster to do?
Don't lose hope! You're definitely not the first ScrumMaster to meet these barriers and you're not alone. Attend this session for some simple tips to make the transition easier on you and the Scrum team.

Scrum for Experimental Biologists at Bio-Rad Laboratories

Victoria Hall, Jonathan Kohn, Michael Urban, Kenneth Oh
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Mesquite 1-3

This talk will present a case study of a current non-software implementation of Scrum at Bio-Rad Laboratories by the Protein Technologies Applications Development Group.   The work facilitated is common to almost all research and medical laboratories. This will be an examination of the importance of maintaining Scrum values while modifying its practices to facilitate and organize hypothesis driven life science experimental work and its products.

Agile Project Management for Government: Agile adoption in the US and UK governments a comparative review

Brian Wernham
Track: See The Future
Room:  Mesquite 4/5

Governments on both sides of the Atlantic have committed to introducing agile change
management for faster results with cheaper implementation at lower risk.
* A review of the latest national and international empirical research studies on agile
adoption in government
* Case studies of government attempts to be agile in the US and UK
* Comparison of US and UK government rules, regulations and strategies that have affected
the take-up and success of agile

Tuesday, May 7th – PM Sessions – 90 MINUTE SESSIONS – 15:30 - 17:00

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Break Down the Silos - Collaboration Techniques for Teams

Maria Matarelli, Dan Neumann
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Acacia A

Discover collaborative techniques for breaking down the silos in how your teams work together. Walk away from this workshop with tools and techniques you can introduce to your project teams immediately to encourage more collaboration and cross team communication. Apply the concepts for increasing team interaction by creating a visual collaboration tool through an experiential workshop segment.

Optimus Prime is Cool: Organisational Transformation and Transformer

Nigel Baker
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia B

Optimus Prime is a Transformer. Transformers are cool. In this workshop we will use Optimus Prime, the transforming toy as a metaphor for organizational change and transformation. We will humourously pull apart this metaphor and discuss whether "Transformation" is really the right word for what we put organizations through. Truly, MORE THAN MEETS THE EYE!

Large-scale Agile Program and Portfolio Management Using Scrum

Mike Cottmeyer
Track: See The Future
Room:  Acacia C

More than 10 years after the signing of the Agile Manifesto, agile is now officially mainstream. PMI is offering an agile certification, and you can hardly find an IT job description that doesn’t ask for some sort of Agile experience. As a community, we’ve become pretty good at setting up agile teams and delivering agile projects. The next frontier for agile methods is tackling the enterprise, and one of the toughest nuts to crack will be the traditional PMO.

In larger, more complex environments, it isn’t sufficient to pair a single product owner with a single team and expect that the work of the business is going to get done. We are dealing with larger, more diverse groups of stakeholders, individuals whose needs often compete for the attention of the team. Furthermore, the teams have to work together in more complex ways that require tighter integration across teams to deliver larger, more complex feature sets.

This talk will explore patterns for dealing with more complex organizations, managing interdependencies between teams and balancing tradeoffs to optimize the project delivery organization. The key questions to answer are "When will we be done?" and "What will we get for our time and money?" We want to give the PMO a way to answer this question without having to resort to traditional plan-driven approaches. This talk will lay out just such an approach.

Beyond the Flat Backlog: Story Mapping in Scrum

Jeff Patton
Track: Tools of the Future
Room:  Acacia D

A product backlog is good at showing what’s most important.  But, the tough part isn’t showing it, it’s figuring it out in the first place.  In this short discussion and workshop Jeff will cover the often-overlooked purpose of user stories: that’s telling stories to help everyone understand the product.  You’ll get hands-on experience building story that tell the whole story of your product while helping whole teams understand and make good priority decisions.  You’ll leave understanding how story mapping fits into effective product discovery that compliments Scrum delivery.

Making Scrum Stick in Regulated Industries

Laszlo Szalvay
Track: See The Future
Room:  Paloverde A

Are you tired of hearing that Scrum won't work here and it wont work there or seeing crappy implementations of ScrumBut? In this "see the future" themed session the presenter will walk through the art of the possible as it relates to doing Scrum well within  heavily regulated industries.  Through lecture and hands on exercises we will learn how Scrums framework can be used to navigate the obstacles of compliance.

My Team's a Train Wreck! Overcoming Real-life Team Dysfunctions

Jan Beaver
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Paloverde B

Coaching a Scrum Team is no simple trick. As a ScrumMaster or coach, you deal with Team problems every day. You use the Scrum framework as much as you possibly can, but what do you do when you don't know what to do? Let's put our heads together to examine four very real, very difficult Team scenarios and explore different approaches to bringing about Team improvement and growth. In this session, we'll generate insights on how to deal with the Team Dictator, the Ambivalent Team, All Out War!, and the Team of Victims.

Business Value Estimation

Chris Sims
Track: See The Future
Room:  Mesquite 1-3

Most scrum teams create effort estimates, often using story points. As a product owner, you also want to have an estimate of the business value of each user story. Business value estimates help you create a more rational backlog and maximize the value the team delivers.
This workshop explores the art and science of estimating the business value of user stories.  Participants will gain an understanding of the essence of business value, and why it is more complex than just revenue or profit. Then we will then learn two surprisingly simple techniques to estimate and quantify business value.

Growing ScrumMasters for the Future

Mark Summers, Helen Meek
Track: Build The Future
Room:  Mesquite 4/5

Do you want to understand where you are on your journey as a ScrumMaster or coach?  Then come and explore.  Maybe you need a way of helping ScrumMasters grow in your organisation? Then this session will provide you with a framework.  We will take a number of key competencies of a ScrumMaster/coach and explore the journey from Shu to Ha to Ri.  This will be an interactive session to explore yourself and share ideas to help each other develop as ScrumMasters and coaches.  This is all based on work done with ScrumMasters and coaches within organisations.

Opening Keynote, Jeff Sutherland

Jeff Sutherland is the co-creator of Scrum and a leading expert on how the framework has evolved to meet the needs of today’s business. The methodology he developed in 1993 and formalized in 1995 with Ken Schwaber has been adopted by the vast majority of software development companies around the world. But Jeff realized that the benefits of Scrum are not limited to software and product development. He has adapted this successful methodology to many other industries including: Finance, health care, government, higher education and communications.

Scrum: The Future of Work Scrum has been around for almost two decades, and has evolved, changed, and grown in those years, but its core insights and ideas have remained the same. We will take a look back at the origins of Scrum, explore how those early ideas continue to drive Scrum, describe the current tipping point as Scrum enters the mainstream, and look at Scrum’s future impact on the nature of work and the structure of organizations.



Tuesday Keynote, Bill Joiner

With the publication of the award-winning book, Leadership Agility, Bill Joiner has become an international thought leader on the subject of agile leadership.

Bill is a seasoned leadership and organization development consultant with over 30 years of experience working with companies based in the US, Canada, and Europe. He is President of ChangeWise, a Boston-area firm that partners with senior leaders to create high performing teams and transform leadership cultures. ChangeWise also provides workshops and action learning programs that enhance leadership agility.

Bill’s most recent articles are “How to Build an Agile Leader” and “Creating a Culture of Agile Leaders.” Bill earned his Doctorate in Organization Development at Harvard University. Some of his clients include Aetna, Bell Canada, Corning, EMC, Fidelity, Harvard Business School, IBM, McKinsey, MIT, Partners Health Care, Pfizer, Polaroid, Royal Canadian Mint, State Street, Travelers, and various federal agencies.

Leadership Agility

Scrum can transform software development teams in amazing ways. As Scrum takes hold and proves it worth, Agile practitioners see the opportunity for more. We need to develop agile organizations. To do this, we need a new kind of “leadership culture” at the senior and middle management levels. This is the innovation we need so our organizations can sustain continually renewed entrepreneurship and adaptability over the long term. But what does this kind of leadership look like in practical terms?

In this keynote, Bill Joiner will introduce us to three “levels” of leadership Agility that emerged from in-depth research on the leadership needed in today’s highly complex, rapidly changing business environment. Going beyond previous conceptions of agile leadership, he will introduce us to the rarely practiced “Catalyst” level of leadership agility and how it can be applied to the larger challenges posed by today’s Agile initiatives.

 



Closing Keynote, Alistair Cockburn

Dr. Alistair Cockburn was one of the original authors of the Manifesto for Agile Software Development. He also co-authored the Declaration of Inter-Dependence, organized the first Agile Development conference, served on the board of the Agile Alliance, co-created the Agile Project Leadership Network and the International Consortium for Agile.

Alistair is widely known for his work on object-oriented design and development, on use cases, for his invention of the Crystal family of methodologies, and his mastery of agile software development. He was voted one of the "The All-Time Top 150 i-Technology Heroes" in 2007.

Less widely known is that Alistair won his first award for poetry at age 40, got his PhD at age 50, broke a world record for master's swimming at the age of 55, holds five international patents on the design of flip-flops, speaks six languages, and created the Initial Response Technique massage and meditation form.

Pay to Learn, and Related Advanced Agile Strategies

The best agile developers use techniques and strategies not in the literature, even seeming sometimes to fly in the face of all things agile. This talk describes why those are great strategies, how to think about them, how to look for them. In terms of the Shu-Ha-Ri progression, this a reduction of Ri-level practice for Ha-level practitioners wanting to one-up their game, and points the way for Shu-level practitioners to get out of their Shu-box.

When you sponsor a Scrum Gathering, your company’s message is exactly where it should be – in front of your target audience.  Gathering attendees come from all over the world and span the spectrum of Scrum practitioners, from product owners and developers to trainers and coaches.

For information on how to sponsor a Gathering download the Sponsorship Package, contact Yvonne at ydewar@scrumalliance.org, or call (905) 281-0555 ext 111.


Platinum Sponsor

SolutionsIQ

As a global provider of Agile transformation services, SolutionsIQ has a deep understanding of large-scale Agile change management. We offer a comprehensive solution to companies seeking to adopt Agile practices, from the team level to executive management. Our training, coaching, and management consulting services help companies navigate the complex cross-functional changes required for transition, and address their impact on corporate culture, governance, and release/portfolio management. Please visit our website to learn more.

 

 

Silver Sponsor

VersionOne

VersionOne is a recognized leader and visionary in agile application lifecycle management. Our mission is to help companies envision and deliver great software. Our promise is to promote and serve the best interests of the agile software development community with genuine respect and humility. Please visit our website to learn more.

 

 

Bronze Sponsor

David Consulting Group

DCG helps companies wanting more business value from their software development investments. Clients challenged with underperforming investments in programs and projects benefit from tailored DCG solutions and services. DCG solution and services enable adoption of proven management practices and decision-reliable metrics that lower costs, boost productivity, and improve business value.

 

 

CollabNet

CollabNet leads Enterprise Cloud Development and Agile ALM products and services for software-driven organizations. CollabNet provides a suite of platforms and services to address three major trends disrupting the software industry: Agile, DevOps, and hybrid cloud development. CollabNet customers improve productivity by 70 percent, while reducing costs by 80 percent.

 

 

Agile Learning Labs

Agile Learning Labs helps teams develop better products faster – and having fun doing it. We specialize in experiential, hands-on agile training and coaching. Learn Scrum by doing Scrum. We are based in Silicon Valley and offer public and private workshops worldwide. For more information, check out http://agilelearninglabs.com

 

 

Platinum Edge

Platinum Edge helps companies deliver value faster, with fewer errors, at a lower total cost. We are an agile-focused team of MBAs, behavioral science experts, and certification instructors who Audit, Train, and Transform organizations to maximize return on investment. If your company uses software development teams, we can help you.

 

 

RippleRock

We enable organisations to radically increase the value they deliver to customers through the end-to-end adoption of Agile principles and practices – providing consulting, training, team coaching, and augmentation to achieve self-sustaining Agile adoption. Successful transformation requires the insight we have gathered working with companies like Rolls Royce, BP, and Tesco.com.

 

 

PMI

PMI is the world’s largest project management member association, representing more than 600,000 practitioners in more than 185 countries. As a global thought leader and knowledge resource, PMI advances the profession through its global standards and credentials, collaborative chapters and virtual communities and academic research. Learn more at www.pmi.org/pmi-acp.

Accommodation update

The Westin Las Vegas is sold out, but we have secured rooms at neighboring hotel Bally's Las Vegas, just a quick five-minute walk to the Gathering. Click here or call 1-877-603-4389 to speak with the hotel directly. Mention the group code SBSRM3 to RESERVE YOUR ROOM TODAY.

Join the global Scrum community in a single location

Join Scrum community members from around the world as they gather together in Nevada for Scrum Alliance Global Gathering: Las Vegas. You'll find plenty of ways to participate as you share experiences, exchange information, and collaborate with fellow Scrum users. Get value and expert insight that provides you with a framework for evaluating and incorporating Scrum while you learn from experienced practitioners and leaders in the Scrum community.

 

Transportation

To get to The Westin Las Vegas Hotel, Casino & Spa, there are a few options:

From McCarran International Airport (LAS)

Airport Shuttle with Westin

Estimated Fee: $7.00 USD (one way)

Hours: Sunday - Saturday 3:30AM – 1:30AM

Contact: (702) 739-7990

 

Taxi

Estimated Fee: $15.00 USD (one way)

Available from the airport 24 hours a day.

 

Executive Cars/Limousines

Estimated Fee: $40 USD and up (one way)

Available from the airport 24 hours a day.

https://www.mccarran.com/Go/Limousines.aspx

 

Driving Directions

Click here to get personalized driving directions to the hotel.

We've chosen The Westin Las Vegas in the heart of Las Vegas to host the Gathering. Situated one block from the Las Vegas strip, The Westin Las Vegas gives you a front-row seat to all the action and excitement of the city.
The weather in May is a lovely transition from Spring to Summer (17°C up to 31°C, 63 to 88F). The city enjoys abundant sunshine year-round with its subtropical desert climate.

Add some extra days to your trip and make time to visit some of the sites and attractions that make Las Vegas one of the world's premier tourist destinations.

Experience Las Vegas

Las Vegas Calendar of Events

Check out some of the exciting things to see and do while you're in the city:

The Walking Gourmet Tour

Vegas Balloon Rides

Bellagio Conservatory & Botanical Gardens

The Auto Collections

Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition

BODIES…The Exhibition

Stratosphere Tower Thrill Rides

The Mob Attraction

CSI: The Experience


160 East Flamingo Road
Las Vegas , NV 89109
United States
http://www.westinvegas.com/

Event Comments

  1. Nigel Baker said on 30 Jul 12 06:25:
    Very much looking forward to this event!
  2. Eric Yang said on 02 Oct 12 10:58:
    This should be a very good one, I am looking forward to it.
  3. Raoul W. Kaiser said on 18 Jan 13 15:01:
    What content is being planned for the 60 min and 90 min sessions each day?
  4. Paul J. Heidema said on 18 Jan 13 18:34:
    The keynote presentations look awesome! Looking forward to seeing so many fellow Scrum and Agile enthusiasts!
  5. Srinivasan Valady Ranganathan said on 19 Jan 13 11:42:
    Iam a recent CSM. Wish I could be there. Seems very exciting in terms of sessions, networking and learning opportunities.
  6. Doug Shelton said on 09 Apr 13 19:16:
    There are two key subjects I'm hoping will be addressed at this conference: (1) Scaling Scrum. At the risk of starting a religious war, I'd like to get some informed feedback/opinion on Leffingwell's Scaled Agile Framework, and potential "Scrum Alliance" alternatives to same - to address what many corporate environments consider to be very valid issues of scaling scrum: not only from the standpoint of coordinating many multiple teams, but also of integrating with companywide toolsets, architecture, governance, portfolio planning, etc. 2. Thoughts on the "delineation" of self-governing teams re preference of processes/standards/tools/solutions versus very often IT/SW Engineering "standardization" of toolsets, processes, etc. across teams. i.e., any concrete guidelines on "to what extent" individual scrum teams should be allowed that self-determination, or perhaps at least a set of criteria to work with on making such a determination?
  7. Greg Manto said on 05 May 13 08:38:
    Is there an iOS app for this event? Something which has agenda, maps, message board, etc?
  8. Bernie Maloney said on 05 May 13 14:45:
    @Doug - I have similar interests, and some ideas. I was part of a team that ran in weekly iterations in a corporate environment (B2B2C) with HW/SW products. We had a 14 month design cycle (HW) and a 3 mo shelf life (due to the consumer market). I'd enjoy an opportunity to kick around some of Leffingwell's and my own ideas.
  9. Rob Jago said on 08 May 13 23:27:
    For a first scrum gathering that I attended, this event was AMAZING! It is going to take some time to digest all that I observed, heard and looked through!!!!! Thank you to event organizers, volunteers and staff!!!!!!
  10. Crystal Watson said on 11 May 13 00:12:
    Will the presentations from this conference be put on the site?
  11. Anu Saripalli said on 13 May 13 13:36:
    Does anyone know when the presentations will be made available
  12. Colin Williams said on 14 May 13 16:43:
    I see some presentations - but they don't look familiar to any that I attended. Can someone review and let us know when the presentations are going to be ready?

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Agile Kaizen presented by Angel Medinilla
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Agile Superpowers presented by Jake Calabrese, Stephen Starkey
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Beyond the Flat Backlog - Stories and Story Mapping in Scrum presented by Jeff Patton
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Blueprint for the Future presented by Ron Jeffries
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Break Down the Silos - Collaboration Techniques for Teams presented by Maria Matarelli, Dan Neumann
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Business Environment Coding Dojos presented by Fredrik Wendt
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Confessions of a New ScrumMaster presented by Natalie Warnert
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Deliberate Practices for Agile Coaching presented by Lv Yi
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Designing Your Organization for Innovation presented by Jim Elvidge
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Effective Scrum and High Quality Code – It Is a Chicken and Egg Relationship presented by Rod Claar
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Facilitation and Communication in Agile Teams presented by Michele Sliger
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From Doing Scrum to Being Agile: Lessons Learned Transforming a Culture presented by Brad Swanson
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Get all players on board! Behaviour-Driven Development made easy presented by Alan Ettlin, PhD
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Giving Teams the Roots to Grow and Wings to Fly presented by Dave Sharrock
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Giving Teams the Roots to Grow and Wings to Fly (Handout 1) presented by Dave Sharrock
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Giving Teams the Roots to Grow and Wings to Fly (Handout 2) presented by Dave Sharrock
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Global View Towards Scrum Implementation: The View from 4 Continents presented by Matt Sharpe
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Growing ScrumMasters for the Future presented by Mark Summers, Helen Meek
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Growing ScrumMasters for the Future (Handout) presented by Mark Summers, Helen Meek
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Guide to Technical Practices presented by Chet Hendrickson, Ron Jeffries
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Helping Dispersed Teams Bridge Time, Distance, and Culture presented by Michael J. Tardiff
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How to Assess Your Effectiveness at Enabling the Hyperproductive presented by Brian Rabon
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Integrating Systems Thinking into Enterprise Agile With the Lessons of Lean presented by Al Shalloway
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It is all about system: How Scrum helps in the bigger picture presented by Sami Lilja
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Looking at Agile-Scrum Metrics from a Human Perspective in a Balanced Scorecard presented by Sarvesh Shroff
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Making Scrum Work in Regulated Industries presented by Laszlo Szalvay
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Managing Technical Debt presented by Fadi Stephan
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Metrics: How will you know if you're Gambling with Scrum? presented by Lonnie Weaver-Johnson, Kate Megaw
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My Team’s a Train Wreck! - Overcoming Real-life Team Dysfunctions presented by Jan Beaver
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Paging Dr. Scrum: Diagnosing Problems in the Agile Organization presented by Angela Druckman
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Practices of a Great SCRUM Product Owner presented by Bob Galen
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Process Increments, Towards better software process improvement presented by Mohamed Amr
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SCRUM + Program Management = LIKE presented by Stacy Gordon, Patrick Beyries
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SCRUM + Program Management = LIKE (Handout) presented by Stacy Gordon, Patrick Beyries
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Scrum and e-Government in the UK and USA - Let’s do it better! presented by Brian Wernham
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Scrum for Experimental Biologists at Bio-Rad Laboratories presented by Victoria Hall and Jonathan Kohn
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The Agile CEO: patterns, principles & practices presented by Charlie Rudd
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The Challenge for the next Decade... presented by Andrea Tomasini
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The controversy of disempowering your bosses presented by Ebba Kraemer
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The Power of Observation presented by Jukka Lindstrom
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Using Organizational Design to Go from Good to Great presented by Rachel Weston Rowell, Jenif Kochanowski!
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Wetware Craftsmanship presented by Brian Bozzuto, Devin Hedge
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