Mastering Work Intake: From Chaos to Predictable Delivery
Regardless of whether you' re creating, enhancing, or maintaining software products, work intake is a challenge you deal with constantly. Doing the right work at the right time can make or break your project, and there are surprisingly few resources to show you how to manage this process effectively. You need to know what your team is executing, what work is next, and the skill sets required to do the work.
Mastering Work Intake: From Chaos to Predictable Delivery focuses on the full pipeline that work follows as it enters and exits your organization, including the different types of work that enter at different levels and times. It is a must-read for agile coaches, Scrum Masters, product owners, project and portfolio managers, team members, and anyone who touches the software development process. Mastering work intake involves recognizing that it' s easy to say " yes" and much harder to say " no."
1144082805
Mastering Work Intake: From Chaos to Predictable Delivery
Regardless of whether you' re creating, enhancing, or maintaining software products, work intake is a challenge you deal with constantly. Doing the right work at the right time can make or break your project, and there are surprisingly few resources to show you how to manage this process effectively. You need to know what your team is executing, what work is next, and the skill sets required to do the work.
Mastering Work Intake: From Chaos to Predictable Delivery focuses on the full pipeline that work follows as it enters and exits your organization, including the different types of work that enter at different levels and times. It is a must-read for agile coaches, Scrum Masters, product owners, project and portfolio managers, team members, and anyone who touches the software development process. Mastering work intake involves recognizing that it' s easy to say " yes" and much harder to say " no."
44.95 In Stock
Mastering Work Intake: From Chaos to Predictable Delivery

Mastering Work Intake: From Chaos to Predictable Delivery

Mastering Work Intake: From Chaos to Predictable Delivery

Mastering Work Intake: From Chaos to Predictable Delivery

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$44.95 

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Overview

Regardless of whether you' re creating, enhancing, or maintaining software products, work intake is a challenge you deal with constantly. Doing the right work at the right time can make or break your project, and there are surprisingly few resources to show you how to manage this process effectively. You need to know what your team is executing, what work is next, and the skill sets required to do the work.
Mastering Work Intake: From Chaos to Predictable Delivery focuses on the full pipeline that work follows as it enters and exits your organization, including the different types of work that enter at different levels and times. It is a must-read for agile coaches, Scrum Masters, product owners, project and portfolio managers, team members, and anyone who touches the software development process. Mastering work intake involves recognizing that it' s easy to say " yes" and much harder to say " no."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781604278538
Publisher: Ross, J. Publishing, Incorporated
Publication date: 01/09/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 298
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Thomas M. Cagley, Jr. is a consultant, speaker, author, coach, and agile guide who leads organizations and teams to unlock their inherent greatness. He has developed estimation models and has supported organizations developing classic and agile estimates. Tom helps teams and organizations improve cycle time, productivity, quality, morale, and customer satisfaction, and then prove it.
Tom is an internationally respected blogger and podcaster for over 11 years, focusing on software processes and measurement. His blog entries and podcasts have been listened to or read over a million times. He co-authored Mastering Software Project Management: Best Practices, Tools and Techniques with Murali K. Chemuturi. Tom penned the " Agile Estimation Using Functional Metrics" chapter in The IFPUG Guide to IT and Software Measurement. His certifications include SAFe® Practice Consultant (SPC) and CSM.
Tom can be found at tomcagley.com. Thomas M. Cagley, Jr. is a consultant, speaker, author, coach, and agile guide who leads organizations and teams to unlock their inherent greatness. He has developed estimation models and has supported organizations developing classic and agile estimates. Tom helps teams and organizations improve cycle time, productivity, quality, morale, and customer satisfaction, and then prove it.
Tom is an internationally respected blogger and podcaster for over 11 years, focusing on software processes and measurement. His blog entries and podcasts have been listened to or read over a million times. He co-authored Mastering Software Project Management: Best Practices, Tools and Techniques with Murali K. Chemuturi. Tom penned the " Agile Estimation Using Functional Metrics" chapter in The IFPUG Guide to IT and Software Measurement. His certifications include SAFe® Practice Consultant (SPC) and CSM.
Tom can be found at tomcagley.com. Jeremy Willets is a coach, speaker, and author who has spent the last decade working with people and teams to achieve greatness in the workplace. He started out as a technical writer on a Scrum team and quickly fell in love with Scrum and the Agile Manifesto values and principles. Since then, he' s served thriving organizations as a Scrum Master, agile coach, senior agile coach, release train engineer, people manager, and mentor.
Jeremy has spoken at conferences throughout the midwestern United States. He' s an avid Substack blogger and music maker. He holds a SAFe® Practice Consultant (SPC) certification.
Jeremy can be found at jeremywillets.com.

Table of Contents

Section One – Work Intake Section One Introduction Chapter 1: What is Work Intake? A Simple Example of Work Intake in Scrum Work Intake and Agile End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 2: What Does Good Work Intake Look Like? Introduction Nine Core Principles End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 3: Basics of Work Intake Push vs. Pull Story-Driven vs. Interrupt-Driven Utilization Maximization Fallacy Flow The Happy Path End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 4: Who Cares About Work Intake? Executives Customers Internal Stakeholders End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 5: Three Levels of Work Intake Organization Level Work Intake Middle-Level Work Intake Team Level Work Intake Hierarchy and Fatalism: A Caution End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 6: Work Intake Anti-Patterns: When Work Intake Goes Wrong Disrupted Work Everything Else is Late Reduced Trust Leadership and Trust Lack of Safety Everything is Started, Nothing is Done Herding End-of-Chapter Questions Section One Conclusion Section One Introspection A Work Intake Case Study as a Business Novella, Chapter 1 Executing New Ideas Section Two – Work Intake Basics: Prioritization and Sequencing Section Two Introduction Chapter 7: Prioritization Priority Why We Prioritize What is a Priority? End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 8: The Who, When, and How of Prioritization Who Participates in Prioritization When to Prioritize How to Prioritize End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 9: Prioritization at All Three Levels Prioritization and Work Intake End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 10: Prioritization Anti-Patterns " I can' t prioritize between these items." " That' s a high priority." " What' s the next thing on the priority list?" " Everything is a high priority." Prioritization Anti-Patterns Conclusion End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 11: Sequencing Why We Sequence What is Sequencing? End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 12: The Who, When, and How of Sequencing Who Participates in Sequencing When to Sequence How to Sequence End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 13: Sequencing at All Three Levels Sequencing and Work Intake Approach to Sequencing End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 14: Sequencing Anti-Patterns " That work isn' t in our backlog of product work. It' s in our backlog of technical work." " That' s not on our backlog." " We' re going to need to do that work eventually, so let' s just do it now." End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 15: Prioritization and Sequencing — Related but Different End-of-Chapter Questions Section Two Introspection A Work Intake Case Study as a Business Novella, Chapter 2 Executing New Ideas Section Three – Work Intake Visualization: Metrics That Matter Section Introduction Chapter 16: Flow Defining Flow Why a Definition is Important Four Common Attributes of Flow End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 17: Flow Metrics Introduction Flow Metrics Basics Basic Metrics of Flow End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 18: Flow Metrics Palette Dashboard Metrics End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 19: Flow Metrics at All Levels Organization Middle Management Team End-of-Chapter Questions Chapter 20: Metrics Anti-Patterns Story Points (As Throughput and/or Velocity Measures) Measuring Individuals Team vs. Team The Data is the Whole Story Measuring Everything (or Nothing) Inconsistent Measurement Definitions Measuring Hours (and Estimating in Time) Measuring the Wrong Thing (And Believing It' s Right) Metrics Fire Drills Local Optimization The " Tragedy of the Commons" Time vs. Productivity End-of-Chapter Questions Section Three Introspection A Work Intake Case Study as a Business Novella, Chapter 3 Executing New Ideas Section Four – Work Intake Problems and Solutions Section Introduction Chapter 21: The Primary Causes of Work Intake Problems Cause #1: Goal Conflict Cause #2: Need Outstrips Supply Cause #3: Pay Practices Cause #4: Project Thinking vs. Pr
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