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MustRead
Monday, Feb 14, 2005
 

Great Boss Dead Boss

 
 
If you only read one book this year, it has to be this one, Great Boss, Dead Boss! I saw Ray Immelman speak at the TOC ICO Word Conference in Miami last October. His work came highly recommend from Alan Barnard. So I thought there had to be something in it worth learning. I didn't get around to reading it until this past month due to the recent upheaval in my personal life. So when January came, I started riding the bus to work rather than battling the SR-520 bottleneck to Redmond. It was worth the sacrifice.

This book has changed the way I think about organization and communication down, across and up. If management is about two things then organizational structure and communication are perhaps the two most basic. Great Boss, Dead Boss has made me rethink both of those. I'm deliberately not telling you what the book is about because that would spoil it for you. What I can say is that it takes the form of a novel similar to Eli Goldratt's The Goal. However, despite the fact that Ray Immelman is part of the TOC community and works for Realization Software, this is not a TOC book. It's a book about people, about relationships, about affiliation, motivation, loyalty and leadership. It's a book which is very applicable to the agile community. If agile's unique contribution to software development was the inclusion of people related factors then Great Boss, Dead Boss offers us that same contribution for management. [Buy it from Amazon at 15% off]

 
 
NewBook
Monday, Apr 12, 2004
 

Agile Project Management

 
 

 Jim Highsmith's new book has just been published. From the back cover...

One of the field’s leading experts brings together all the knowledge and resources you need to use APM in your next project. Jim Highsmith shows why APM should be in every manager’s toolkit, thoroughly addressing the questions project managers raise about Agile approaches. He systematically introduces the five-phase APM framework, then presents specific, proven tools for every project participant.

You can purchase  Agile Project Management  through my affiliate link with InformIT for a stunning 30% discount. Buy it now!

 
 
NewBook
Tuesday, Mar 23, 2004
 

User Stories Applied

 
 
Mike Cohn was a great supporter of my book during and after its development. Mike's latest book has just been published. So now I get a chance to reciprocate. User Stories Applied for Agile Software Development is an attempt to bring repeatability and tranferability to the development of requirements in eXtreme Programming. Mike's goal is ultimately to make estimating and planning more accurate. The book pulls on Mike's experience with Scrum and there is plenty of advice on how to report progress using Burndown Charts. I haven't had a chance to read much of the book yet and I will report back once I have.
Meanwhile, you can purchase User Stories Applied through my affiliate link with InformIT for a stunning 30% discount. Buy it now!
 
 
           
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