Entries tagged with “youtube”.


Last summer, Rally started a video series called “Chalk Talks“.

I was fortunate enough to have filmed several “Chalk Talk” videos about some of the basics of Agile software development (The Agile Manifesto, Scrum Basics, Iteration Demo and Review Meeting, and other topics).

Since then, Rally’s expert team of Agile Coaches have joined the party and recorded additional Chalk Talks, again on some great basic Agile topics: Ronica Roth on User Stories, John Martin on Story Points, and Rachel Weston on Release Planning in Agile just to name a few.

We also tapped into the wisdom of some of our other Agile Coaches: Julie Chickering, Mark Kilby, and Ken Clyne.

Our Rally Chalk Talks are informal videos, typically 3 – 5 minutes long, intended to provide quick, easy introductions to Agile topics.

Filmed in a short, tutorial format, these videos are great to share with your team as they are getting up to speed on Agile.

To get a feel for our latest work, here’s Rally Agile Coach Ronica Roth in her great Chalk Talk on User Stories. ( during which you can find out why a dog would want his own laptop :D )


Be sure to check out our entire catalog of Chalk Talks and subscribe to our YouTube channel if you’d like to be notified when we publish new videos. We already have two more Chalk Talks queued up: “Kanban and Scrum” and “Agile and Lean”.

As you look through our current catalog of talks, be sure to let us know what other topics you’d like us to cover in future talks.

About the Author: Jean Tabaka is a wine enthusiast, author and Agile Fellow at Rally Software Development. Subscribe today to get free updates by email or RSS.

enterprise-it-needs-to-make-a-fundamental-shiftLast week, I had the pleasure of attending a talk given by Geoffrey Moore. You may know him through his renown as the author of “Crossing the Chasm“, “Inside the Tornado“, and his most recent book, “Dealing with Darwin“. Geoff is an energetic, articulate speaker who always has interesting insights and mental model twists to share. On this particular occasion, Geoff had been sponsored by Rally Software to speak at the annual Toolapalooza event at Cisco. His topic? “The Future of Enterprise IT”.

Geoffrey Moore "The Future of Enterprise IT"

Geoffrey Moore asking for a show of hands from the crowd about their social media use.

What most struck me about Geoff’s talk was his query about what we are currently capable as consumers versus how we are held back as employees. Specifically he was speaking about the technologies in social media that are growing and advancing at an alarming rate.

As consumers, we engage in MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and all sorts of other emerging social media. We stay connected. We collaborate. We can instantly survey one another. We can quickly comment and offer direction.

In other words, we have an ability to maintain a presence regardless of time or location.

In contrast, we are not embracing these social media tools within our corporations.  Essentially, as Geoff put it,”We are more productive as consumers than as employees. Why can’t I have my tools at work?”

Specifically, he spoke of the need for Enterprise IT to move from its role as “system of record” to supporting enterprise search, enterprise facebook, and enterprise mobility (as examples).

Enterprise IT needs to make a fundamental shift: from being the core of the operations of a company and being data-centric, to being at the edge of the company’s face, being very network-centric.

For this audience at Cisco, this wasn’t too much of a stretch in mental model shifts. Cisco has been leading corporate collaborate shifts, most notably through their Telepresence technology. You’ve probably seen the ads on T.V. for this remarkable collaboration technology. (BTW, the Telepresence project effort  determined that they HAD to use an Agile approach in order to deliver their product in a timely manner. And, they chose the Rally tool to support their multi-team effort.)

For me, Geoff’s talk nudged me into that realm of the “blindingly obvious”.  I really hadn’t thought about how the social media in my consumer life have not been effectively absorbed into my corporate life, either within my company or in the community of companies with whom I consult. I have believed in creating collaborative communities.

It has been a passion of mine in guiding organizations in their Agile adoptions. Geoff’s insights just confirmed to me, my passion now has to invite the consumer world of social media into Agile, collaborative organizations.