Archive for January, 2012

Whenever I use John Deere as an example of a fantastic Agile adoption, I always get looks of surprise. That’s quickly followed by an ‘a-ha’ moment when I share that today’s

From my visit to the test farm in Des Moines - note all of the hardware on top of the tractors

tractors are run by more lines of code than the early space shuttles. Yesterday, ComputerWorld published a great article about John Deere’s Agile adoption, characterized as a ‘big bang’ across their 800-person development organization within a year. It’s definitely worth the 5 minute read.

By 2050, there will be 9 billion people on the Earth.

In 50 years, the world population will require 100% more food. Seventy percent of that food is expected to come from efficiency-improving technology. John Deere considers these their user stories, and they strive to use technology to help solve these global problems. If the ComputerWorld article is worth 5 minutes of your time, then Chad Holdorf’s in-depth talk is worth every bit of 25 minutes to hear John Deere’s bigger vision and how they inspire teams to tackle it at John Deere.

You can work with John Deere too.

I’ve been honored to work with Tony Thelen, director of John Deere’s Intelligent Solutions Group, and Chad Holdorf, their Agile Coach, throughout this transformation. And I share their passion for connecting engineers to solve these potentially disastrous problems. I’d like nothing more than to see some smart folks go to work for John Deere.

With my son in a John Deere plow.

Tractors and Agile? Absolutely. I can’t think of a better example of how software is shaping the world we live in – every single day. Congratulations Tony and Chad and best of luck on your social mission.

Ryan Martens is founder and CTO of Rally Software, a hopeful Citizen Engineer and a recovering Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Unreasonable Institute. You can follow him on Twitter @RallyOn.

Are you an engineer? If so, our society needs you to apply yourself to the global warming and other global social problems for the remainder of your life.

Just before the Holidays, an article I wrote ran in Fast Company on the call-to-action I believe all engineers need to embrace. Read the article, “Engineers: Why Aren’t You Doing Work For Good?

Is this a calling that resonates with you? Do you think it’s feasible? If so, how can we get there? I would love to hear from you.

Ryan Martens is CTO and founder of Rally Software, a recovering Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Unreasonable Institute and chief promoter of the Entrepreneurs Foundation of Colorado. You can follow him on Twitter @RallyOn.