innovation


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.

In a continuation on my last post on Eric Ries and The Lean Startup, I wanted to share how these concepts continue to ripple through Rally. (Learn more on how to apply these topics in your business at our upcoming in-person and virtual Portfolio Management Roadshow featuring Eric alongside an awesome line-up of speakers.)

Three weeks ago while in Denmark, I had a deep dive with customers on the topic. While in Copenhagen Denmark and talking with 40 European customers at Rally’s Agile Open Forum, one of the top 5 questions that group proposed was:

“How can we develop features that give the maximum long-term value and the minimum long-term cost?”

Vist Custdev.com for this "Cheat Sheet"

I believe you will find the answer to this question in Steve Blank’s customer development approach to differentiating new products or simply in the build-measure-learn cycle of Lean Startups. For Agile teams that can already build right and build fast, this answers the question of what to build!

By focusing on the concept of creating “validated learning,” a Lean Startup team does not provide solution development teams stories that are not validated or constructed to validate a hunch.  As such, the Agile backlog becomes prioritized by learning and risk.  The result is a team that couples Agile product development cycles with customer problem discovery and customer solution validation. What is great about this approach?  It works at the whole business or product-line level, and you can also slim this down for use with A/B testing of enhancements too. Your level of application only depends upon your scope as well as the scale and maturity of your Agile efforts.  The more Agile your enterprise is the more leverage you can have with these techniques.

The result of this work allows you to determine, if there is desirability for this solution before you commit to ship it.  As a result of understanding the intersection of feasibility, effectiveness and desirability, you can be sure to deliver features that have maximum value.  And, by working with a minimal viable product (MVP) concept, you can be sure not to overbuild that solution too.  In this way you can be sure to build the features with maximum value and minimal long-term cost.

To me, Lean Startup is a method to drive continuous innovation and brutal, entrepreneurial prioritization. But taken to the extreme, Lean Startup is a way of being and acting and can become an attribute of culture. In addition to speaking and teaching on the topic, we have had some customers and partners come to learn, teach and do with us. The following efforts demonstrate how these activities can become cultural.

Act like a scientist, not a fire fighter

In a tradition of Lean companies, we had one of our largest customers come visit our office in early October.  He and his company have adopted and scaled Agile very well.  Now, they are focused on creating validated learning to do concurrent set-based development on their toughest problems. He pointed us toward this HBR Article on Decoding the DNA of the Toyota Production System.  You will notice the Lean rules and principles from Toyota support the Lean Startup approach.  This customer’s hope was to share his learning to help make us a better partner.  His trip was a true gift.  Thank you, Pat.

Two weeks prior to our customer visit, our friends George Kembel and Scott Dorsey, from Stanford’s d.school were here in Boulder. The principles and method of design thinking are clearly wrapped into the Lean Startup.  In design thinking, the iterations include practices to empathize, ideate, prototype, and test/reframe. Typically, these cycles are used to create the initial design of a new product or service, but not at the d.school. In the d.school, students take these concepts into more of a continuous cycle to help shape emerging services or social startups. Like Lean Startup, the d.school is learning to run people and teams through fast and continuous cycles of build-measure-test to create a “continuous innovation to create radically successful” efforts.

In a serendipitous way,  I taught a seminar on customer development and business model canvas approaches to fellows at the  Unreasonable Institute.  In September, Zach did a crash course on “Why Lean Startup Approaches Work” for 120 folks at the Silicon Flatiron’s portion CU Law School and Boulder/Denver New Tech Meetup.  Like my first post said, it has truly been Lean Startup everywhere at Rally.

If this post was not concrete enough for you, my final Lean Startup post is on “How to Apply Lean Startup to Your Agile Rollout.”

Ryan Martens is CTO/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.

With the publishing of Eric Ries’ book, The Lean Startup, I can barely go a day without talking to someone about it. Eric clearly executed a lean startup on himself and this topic – by focusing on learning. Eric started much of his work a couple of years ago with his blog Startup Lessons Learned and by publicly speaking on the topic. I saw him first at Return Path, a local Rally customer, in May of 2010.  Since that time, he has continued to refine the principles and collected great stories for this book that speaks equally well to an new entrepreneur as a seasoned business professional.

The book is just a fantastic and hard-hitting summary of this approach to business, as well as a manual on how to teach entrepreneurial behaviors.  If Eric was a seasoned author, this would be a great book, but given the fact it is his first effort – it makes the book astonishing.  It debuted at #2 on New York Times Bestseller list!

If you do not know Eric or The Lean Startup model, it works by developing product/service in parallel with the customer in a market.  The method can be summarized by three words executed repeatedly; Build, Measure, Learn.  These cycles continue to help you assess whether to stay the course, pivot or stop.  The Lean Startup is a combination of applying Agile Development, and Customer Development methods, but draws on Lean, crowd sourcing/social and complexity to create a true collection of thinking and acting tools for today’s complex world.

Eric’s sub title really sums the book up well –

How Today’s Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses

… as these ideas and thinking apply equally as well for venture-backed tech startup, impact investing, social startups or internally funded intrapreneuring efforts.  If you read his blog, you will see he A/B tested about 20 sub-titles to come to this one. So, not only is a great sub-title, but it is one that attracts the right market.

Have you clicked on the book image to buy it yet?  No?  Let me try one more thing!

For Agile teams, programs or enterprises, the message from this book should be clear: you need to start applying customer development approaches to the front-end of your Agile efforts. You can read about Rally’s latest customer development in the Making of Project Stratus; and you can see the results of these efforts at our Agile Portfolio Management launch in December.

As part of this launch effort, Zach Nies and I have been given a great gift in the last month of continuous lean startup (more on that in later posts). Last week, I found out that Zach and I will have the opportunity to interview Eric live on February 2nd.  If you don’t buy the book, you should at least register for the 1 hour video event.

Ryan Martens is CTO/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.

Last week, Zach and I enjoyed the incredible opportunity of engaging in a video interview with Geoffrey Moore on his new book, Escape Velocity.  First things first, for those of you who didn’t attend live, the archived webinar and slides are now available.

The book really hit home for me because, at its core, its really all about steering the Agile business. It provides both the new portfolio models and the specific stories for executives, as well as Product and Development teams to escape the “pull” of the past successes and set yourself up for the next success.  Specifically for development teams making the transition to a more Agile execution model, Geoffrey describes ways to work the budget/portfolio process to invest in the further development of the companies crown jewels.  With this kind of strategic investment, you can work to create your unmatchable offer power that wins customer market while increasing company power necessary to become a top tier play in your category. Geoffrey really connected the topics from the book with his perspective on the value of Agile development:

“Agile puts you in the problem state with the end user, live in that problem state and drive backwards on how to get there.  If there is an opportunity for a breakthrough, you will find it before anyone else does.” – Geoffrey Moore


Take the next step
I highly recommend buying the book, if you haven’t already.  In addition to standard e-book, hardcover and audible versions of the book, Geoffrey has released a real innovations for his new and 20 year fans. With Escape Velocity, he created an enhanced ebook on Amazon with embedded videos and an enhanced ebook for the Ipad/Ibook with links back into past books and models. There is now one source for everything Moore!
Geoffrey’s book has specific strategies for transforming vision and strategy.  These strategies should be easier for Agile teams that can support fast learning. If  however you are looking to first transform execution power to enable your escape velocity, don’t miss some of our great content to support your Agile adoption:

Please let us know what you thought of the webinar by commenting on this post.

Ryan Martens is CTO/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

Six weeks ago, I turned off the the Rally Software hose of work, and turned on a 24 hour by 7 day per week fire-hose called the Unreasonable Institute 2011. Now I am back to tell about the sabbatical that I introduced to this blog back in June.


Fellow on stage at The Unreasonable Climax - George Bernard Shaw looking on

I am NOT leaving Rally to start a social venture, though many people asked me that question over the last six weeks. Instead, I am investing with other Rally employees at creating a social enterprise inside of Rally.

Wow – that was fantastic experience with 26 entrepreneurs from 11 countries who all have the potential to change the lives of 1 million or more people.  There was so much energy at that place, I did not get recharged; I got energized. I was brought into a great family and I feel great about helping on so many levels, but I do not long for the lonely start-up days again. Given the success we have all had at Rally and the culture for give-back and entrepreneurship, I feel like I/we will have a huge impact on the world by intrapreneuring on the Rally Foundation.

What most people do not realize is that the Unreasonable Institute was the perfect place to incubate our new social venture, the Rally Foundation.  The Rally Foundation is our own social venture that we are developing to help social enterprises around the world use agility to amplify their impact. My sabbatical just put more fuel behind that fire and taking time to talk again with Suzanne DiBianca from the Salesforce Foundation and Brian Breckenridge from LinkedIn really stoked the fire with successful social enterprise case studies.

By immersing myself into the world of the Unreasonable Institute, I was able to gain empathy for these social entrepreneurs, engineers and funders. As such, I created an empathy map to help understand and share the pains and true needs of these organizations. With these early hunches articulated, our Foundation team is now running the customer development process to help us make this initial launch of the foundation very successful.

Now I was not just on a research mission to help our Foundation; I was there primarily to mentor the 2011 Fellows and to help them create successful social ventures. I was also a member of “the team” of the Unreasonable Institute as a recitation leader. No matter which these perspectives you look at, the sabbatical was a huge bonfire of success.

Mentoring fellows

As a mentor, I focused my attention on teaching the Steve Blank’s tools of customer development and the Burt Decker techniques of public speaking. On the first Tuesday of the Institute, Ben Carey and I taught a morning session focused on customer development and business model generation. In the afternoon, we did 1:1 sessions with fellows on their models. That satisfied most people’s needs, except for Anne at Afroes.  I had the good fortune to work with Anne for the next four weeks on the shape of her business model and canvas.  The business model canvas and the basic four steps of customer development allowed these fellows to tease apart their businesses and tell a story using very simple business language. As I wrote in the Unreasonable Blog, most of these business models are very complicated by multiple customer segments, value propositions and revenue/impact drivers. Before these models, it was very hard for these entrepreneurs to tell simple stories about their ventures.


The first pass at a business model canvas by one fellow

As the pressure built on the fellows toward their funding trip to San Francisco, I got more and more requests for presentation feedback and coaching.  I turned to my Decker training and grid to help these folks. With the help of another mentor, we focused the grid by locking in the three points on:

  1. 50,000 feet to tell the story of problem/solution
  2. 30,000 feet to tell the story of product/market fit
  3. 3 feet to tell the managerial economics story of why the venture works and scales

As some of the 20 Rallyers who attended community pitches and the Unreasonable Climax, they could see the Decker grids emerging. I used my Ipad to film and review pitches 1:1 with the fellows. It was a powerful and rapid feedback cycle. It was not the 9 video sessions I did at Decker training, but it was fast learning.

Running a recitation

As a member of the 2nd-year Unreasonable team with Daniel, Teju, Tyler, Ceasar, Megah and Lindsey, I was just a part-timer.  My title was Entrepreneur in Residence (EIR), and I ran a recitation and facilitate the final group retrospective. I did not live next door to the mansion or run the 24X7 full emersion like this team. I lived four miles away with my family, and friends. My role as a member of the team was to run one of the five weekly recitation groups – mine included Maria, Cynthia, Luis, Jamie and Myskin.

The recitation process was new this year and worked well, but not great. Given the fully packed schedule of the Institute, the opportunity to take meetings while in the US, and the fact that most of these entrepreneurs were still running ventures; it was hard to keep the rhythm of Saturday recitations from 3:30 to 6:30 PM. I tried to structure our group around the highly successful Entrepreneur’s Organizations forum groups. These peer-to-peer forums allow young leaders to get coaching and mentoring from their peers. Because we could not hold the meeting times, the forum structure did not hold either.  However, given the 24X7 live-in format of the Unreasonable Institute, there was no shortage of peer support. This group formed into a family very quickly. We saw birthday parties, engagement parties, family picnics, late-night club dancing and some very sad good-byes. I enjoyed our recitation. It got me a closer look at the real lives of these young social entrepreneurs.  As I am not much of an executer, I believe we could have done better and that other groups were more successful in this structure.

Researching problems for our Foundation

Though I stopped my flow of work, I did not stop my flow of non-profit work. As the Institute ran, I continued to run the Entrepreneurs Foundation of Colorado and be an active member of the Rally Foundation team. I even had both these teams meet at the Unreasonable Mansion to help experience the place and people up close, including the lack of air conditioning. After Ben and I did the customer development class, I became convinced that our Foundation team needed to follow that model too. As part of my time at the Unreasonable Institute, our team did interviews with the Salesforce.com Foundation, Linked-In Foundation, Unicef, IDEO.org, Engineers without Borders and Engineering for Developing Communities as well as a number of the fellows. It was a target-rich environment and we sized the moment to kick-off our problem/solution discovery process.

I am very happy with the time I gave to the Unreasonable Institute this summer. I would encourage other Rally sabbatical takers to follow a similar approach and get into the context of their future while on sabbatical. I was able to give, learn and grow by jumping in with this very unique situation. As a result, I helped build the wave of momentum behind the launch of the Rally Foundation – our social enterprise.

Finally, I am wrote this on a plane headed toward Tofino BC, Canada for a real vacation.  My sabbatical was not what most people think of as a break. It was a fantastic opportunity afforded me by 7 fun years at Rally; but I did catch Coho salmon and surf Canada on a real vacation.   I hope everyone is having a great time at Agile 2011 with the illustrations and the great announcements this week on Kanban, reporting, idea management and portfolio management partners.

If you want more details on the Unreasonable Institute, the fellows or my blow-by-blow account, you can:

Ryan Martens is CTO/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

I leave on sabbatical next week to be the Entrepreneur in Residence at the Unreasonable Institute as they kick off their six-week program for 2011 (see my earlier post for background on the sabbatical). If you are in Boulder or flying by this summer and you dig social venture efforts, you should definitely consider attending one of the Unreasonable Events.

The Institute’s Global Summit and VIP reception were fantastic last year and attending these events are what got me hooked on spending my sabbatical with this group. Daniel, Teju and Tyler knocked the ball out of the park last summer and I can’t wait to be more involved this year.

When I say involved, I am going to be at the Unreasonable headquarters four to five days a week and leading recitation sessions for five of the 2011 fellows. I am also going to be working on the business model for the Rally Foundation. The Rally Foundation is the evolution of our corporate social responsibility (CSR) team and additional corporate stock funding. The CSR group has ramped up in 2011, and we are now focused on making our efforts sustainable in the long-term. We do not just want to grant 5% of our capital every year, we want to do more and more every year.

I get inspiration for a self-sustaining foundation model from three examples:

To kick off Rally’s Foundation efforts and the Unreasonable Fellows of 2011, Ben Carey and I will be teaching a course on Business Model Canvas on Tuesday, June 21st at the Atlas building on the University of Colorado campus. Our course will be based on Ben’s post on the 1-hour session he gave at our RallyON conference in May, along with Alexander Osterwalder’s post about how Business Model Canvas links with Steve Blank’s customer development in the area of social entrepreneurship.

In the spirit of being unreasonable and helping to kick-off our Foundation’s efforts, we have decided to help sponsor Unreasonable.TV this summer. This is a fantastic effort focused on sharing the experiences and stories of the the Unreasonable entrepreneurs. Our Foundation team is really excited about the alignment of vision and values between the Unreasonable Institute and the Rally Foundation.

Let us know what you think and hopefully we will see you at some of the Unreasonable events this summer.

Ryan Martens is CTO/Founder of Rally and on the way to be the Entrepreneur-in-Residence at the Unreasonable Institute this summer in Boulder –  See the Institute’s 2011 Fellows – Watch the intro video to the Institute and follow my escapades in the Unreasonable Mansion with twitter @RallyOn

Next week we are running a fun experiment in Boulder, as we host our first users conference: RallyOn 2011. We are experimenting with a number of things as we learn how to engage, connect, and contribute to our growing world-wide customer community.

First, we are trying to leverage social technologies in a number of ways to reach users all around the world. One way we are doing this is by using Stack Exchange, the Internet’s leading community-driven Q&A engine, to meld a community of agile software development and program management experts. Conceivably, this could kick-off a new paradigm in professional conferences, attaining the elusive goal of extending the conference experience of networking, knowledge sharing and community into the online environment with virtual attendees, and living long after the closing session.

We invited representatives from Stack Exchange to join the conference, promoting and shepherding the community experience. As a result, two members from the Programmers and Project Management communities will be in attendance, sponsored by Stack Exchange. Mark and Anna, who have coauthored this post, have already brought guidance and energy to the interactions between communities, and are sure to do so during RallyOn, as these two communities closely align with the goals of the conference and the interests of our attendees.

Cool stuff about Stack Exchange that I bet you did not know:
You may be familiar with Stack Exchange’s most popular site, Stack Overflow, the flagship software programming Q&A site that receives tens of millions of visitors each month. However, the vision far exceeds that single site. Since August 2010, the company has launched 49 new vertical-oriented Q&A sites. By building vibrant communities of experts around specific topics, Stack Exchange is able to facilitate answers to 94% of all questions network-wide.

  • Questions generally average 10 answers, giving you different insights and approaches to tackling problems or issues.
  • Answers are peer-reviewed by experts within the community, with those answers receiving the most positive votes rising to the top, guaranteeing the most accurate, relevant or acceptable answer to even the most difficult question.
  • Optimized for search engines, these answers help hundreds if not thousands of other people who are seeking answers to similar questions on the web.
  • The experts forge a community of subject matter enthusiasts, earning reputation and recognition for their contributions through the reputation point system.

At Rally, we have a fantastic marketing department that puts on great regional events and huge webinars, but we have never done a users conference. However, we are not sure what the best model for our users conference should be. So we are bringing a community of experts and Agile enthusiasts together around the RallyOn 2011 conference. With the help of two enthusiastic Stack Exchange members to showcase the power and benefits of a community-driven Q&A network like Stack Exchange, we are excited about adding a whole new group of Agile experts to our current communities.

To help track the success of this endeavor, we’ve created a special RallyOn11 tag on each Stack Exchange site. Please tag your questions with this tag and also include it in your profile. Participation is a snap, and we’ll be there at the conference to give you a hand.

While exploring the Stack Exchange sites, check out the RallyOn11 tag to discover peers with similar questions and interests. We’ll also be streaming live feeds from the sites directly to a monitor at the conference, allowing you to observe the community’s activity in real-time.

What’s in it for you?

  • As a director, the sites give your team an existing resource to crowd-source problems and find solutions from a group of subject matter experts.
  • As a director, the Project Management community often addresses management level problems including those involving other managers, executives and team members.
  • As an Agile coach or internal champion, these sites are a resource your customers can turn to stay on the right track.
  • As an Agile coach or internal champion, you can build your reputation and find inspiration for new ways of approaching issues.
  • As a developer, you can find answers to programming problems, project management concerns or challenges interacting with management.

Find Me at RallyOn!

Community: Programmers
Programmers attracts software development experts with interests in subject areas such as development methodologies, architecture practices, and algorithm and data structure concepts. It evolved out of the flagship Stack Overflow site when it became apparent that a separate place to ask questions about general software development concepts and programmers’ professional development, rather than specific implementation details, was needed. An example of this type of question can be found here.

Anna Lear (@aalear) is joining us from the programmers community, and is one of the community’s respected moderators.

Find Me at RallyOn!

Community: Project Management
Project Management covers a wide array of topics including: learning and implementing project management, challenges in managing projects and people (as well as challenges with project managers) and specific techniques and best practices from different methodologies. Project management approaches discussed include Agile, Waterfall, the PMBOK Guide, PRINCE2, ITIL and mish-mash of methodology that often gets implemented in the real world.

Mark Phillips (@mpmobile) is joining us from the project management community, having been a member of that community since its earliest days.

Ryan Martens is a member of NRDC’s Environmental Entrepreneurs, founder/CEO of the Entrepreneurs Foundation of Colorado, and Founder/CTO at Rally Software Development.

Bernard, our top penguin here at Rally, has been doggedly engaged in our search for a Director of HR. Feedback from our recent blog post about the search generated interesting discussion. To wit: why wasn’t Rally using this opportunity to come up with a new title for this Director position?

Epiphany moment for Bernard! Being a highly engaged Agile penguin, he became quite concerned about this very important role. Bernard realized that the traditional title just didn’t seem to fit with Rally as a truly Agile organization. Rally has been named best company to work for in Colorado. And we place #6 by Outside Magazine as one of the top 50 places to work for in the US. With the vision, culture, and values here at Rally, Bernard is now quite determined that we bring a new title to this role.

And so on Bernard’s behalf (lack of opposable thumbs limits some of Bernard’s “hands-on” work at Rally), I recently put the call out on twitter:

W00t! We received 27 responses, though I suspect some suggestions were more tongue-in-cheek than real suggestions. Nonetheless, it is clear: we have great creative people in the Agile community thinking about this role.

Here are the 27 title suggestions Bernard and I received in our search:

  1. Company Capacity & Fun Facilitator
  2. VP of Keeping It Real
  3. Talent Facilitator
  4. Chief People Advocate
  5. Chief Happiness Officer
  6. Head of Talent
  7. Team Consistency Enforcer
  8. “Sparkles” – (Okay, this person was confusing a dog-naming twitter stream with our stream)
  9. Director of Human Capital
  10. Director of Human Power
  11. Chief People Servant
  12. People Potentiator
  13. Hawaiian Shirt and Jeans Facilitator
  14. Director for Business Enablement through People
  15. Pit Crew Leader – (a Daniel Pink reference?)
  16. People & Fun Leader/Facilitator
  17. Head Cat-Herder – (Bernard is unamused)
  18. Kitten Cultivator and Litterbox Cleaner – (see above)
  19. Director of Helping People Be More Resourceful
  20. Staffing Facilitator
  21. Director of the People Team
  22. Employee Ombudsman
  23. [certified] People Master
  24. Head Employee Servant Leader
  25. People Servant Leader
  26. Employee Development
  27. Trusted Employee Advisor

Thanks to all, and nice work. Bernard and I keep going back to Daniel Pink’s “Drive.” Because we value Pink’s guidance on autonomy, mastery, and purpose, we believe this role must embody Rally’s commitment to an Agile culture of learning and growth.

Now, what do YOU think the name of this role should be?

Jean Tabaka is a March Madness college hoops freak, a crash skier, author and Agile Fellow at Rally Software Development. You can follow Jean on Twitter at @jeantabaka

Bernard is a member of the Rally Office of the CTO and mascot for the Unreasonable Institute of Boulder CO.

We’re looking for a Director of HR

Rally is proud of its continued growth since our inception 8 years ago. In the last 2 years, we’ve practically doubled in size. And now we need help sustaining our pride in our company, our culture, and our people. We need a great, unique Director of HR.

Rally Looks Different

Taking its lead from Jim Collins “Good to Great”, Rally truly lives by its core values. For us, our Director of HR would be both an internal and external model and supporter of these values: Create your own reality; Respect people; Make and meet commitments; Give back to the community; Theory-driven decision making; Sustainable work-life balance.

We’re proud of our awards!

Named the Best Company to Work For in Colorado in 2009 and 2010, and ranked the #6 Best Places to Work in the nation from Outside Magazine in 2010, Rally offers a highly collaborative culture and work-life balance that attracts top talent. Our product gets plenty of accolades too, winning four consecutive Jolt Awards (the software industry’s equivalent of the Oscars®) in our category 2006-2009 and recently recognized by industry analyst Forester Research as “offering the best combination of capability and strategy of Agile ALM tools.”

Agile organizations look different

From the start, Rally has prided itself in being a truly Agile organization in the software industry. What does it mean to be a Director of HR in an Agile company? Here are a few characteristics of Agile we value:

  • Servant Leadership — our management model takes a page out of the Robert Greenleaf approach to leadership: lead by serving and serve by leading. Our Director of HR must be someone who can sustain this environment, mentor others in it, and create professional development opportunities for growth in this management style.
  • Self-Organizing Teams — part of being an organization of servant leaders includes a strong belief in the value of self-organizing teams. We eschew command-and-control style management. Rather, we seek insights from teams and turn to them to guide our solutions that align with our corporate vision.
  • Emphasis on Teams — Rally embraces a strong culture of collaboration. For us, that means that we value team accomplishments over individualism or heroism. Our HR Director needs to help us guide employees in the value of team ownership and the intrinsic rewards therein.
  • De-emphasis on hierarchy — Finally, in our Agile company, we de-emphasize traditional hierarchical organizational structures. Rally is proud of maintaining a fairly flat organization even as we grow upwards of 250 people.

Could This Be You?

So, our Director of HR may look a bit different than you might expect. Still, we are looking for some great solid HR credentials that should look very familiar to you. If this sounds like you, we would love to hear from you via the career section of our web site. There you will find a detailed job description and other benefit details. If this is not you, but you know someone who might be interested, please share this with your friends and with your networks using the “ShareThis” button below or through our LinkedIn post.

Tim Miller is a dropout from the University of Colorado but somehow has two degrees from CU. He keeps sane by playing golf and tennis and is the CEO at Rally Software Development.

After reading the Manifesto for Agile Software Development in January of 2002, Rally really took shape. I am proud of my involvement in the software industry for the last 25 years, but the last 10 have been fantastic thanks to the group pictured below, who came together in February 2001 in Snowbird, UT.

A ten year mark is the perfect time to stop and reflect and the 10-Year Manifesto anniversary is no different.  In this spirit, Dr. Alistair Cockburn, one of the original Manifesto authors, is hosting an open discussion on February 12 with a group of 35 individuals from varied backgrounds in our industry. I am proud to attend and we are proud to be a sponsor of this event.  I look forward to joining in the reflection, discussion and celebration with other attendees at the Snowbird resort. (With these recent storms, the 100+ inches of base and 14″ of fresh snow should make for a great weekend.)

The event theme is “Solved, Solvable, Unsolvable Problems.”  As participants we’ve been challenged to consider the following three questions:

  1. What problems in software or product development have we solved (and therefore should not simply keep re-solving)?
  2. What problems are fundamentally unsolvable (so therefore we should not keep trying to “solve” them)?
  3. What problems can we sensibly address – problems that we can mitigate either with money, effort or innovation? (and therefore, these are the problems we should set our attention to, next.)

What do you think?  What are your answers? What other questions should we be asking of each other? The Agile community needs to be an active part of the anniversary celebration and the conversation it creates. Please take a moment to stop, reflect and make your own contribution to this event. Visit the ‘10-Years of the Agile Manifestowebsite to join the dialog. You can also post your photos of agile development from the last decade to the event’s Flickr group. Follow and contribute to the discussion on Twitter using the hashtag: #10yrsagile. And, share your thoughts with us in the comments below.

The Agile Manifesto 10th anniversary will continue at the Agile 2011 Conference scheduled for August 7 – 13 in Salt Lake City. Agile 2011 will provide another opportunity for the Agile community to reflect on the Agile Manifesto and how it contributed to software development over the last decade.

Saturday’s Snowbird event marks an amazing 10 years in the software development industry. This is a great opportunity to think about how far we’ve come and what we can accomplish in the next 10 years. What’s on your roadmap for 2021?

Ryan Martens is an active snow shoveler, skier dreaming of skiing at Snowbird this weekend, and CTO at Rally Software Development.

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