Hi Suzanne,
Thank you for your kind and encouraging response to these videos. It
means a lot.
We presented the course "Agile Success with Open Agile Adoption" at the
Scrum Retreat in Raleigh NC on 10/27-28, sponsored and arranged by the
Scrum Alliance. This event offered a huge opportunity to bring OAA with
Open Space to the attention of about 85 external and internal Agile
coaches. These are influential connectors who collectively touch
thousands of people as they do their work. I printed 100 copies of the
Open Agile Adoption Handbook, and gifted every single attendee with a copy.
It is important to note at this time your observation, Suzanne:
/"...introducing Agile in an Agile Open way is far better than mandating
it. The same would apply to all change management approaches outside of
Scrum and Agile. "/
YES, and, so interesting: others in the USA and Europe have made the
very same observation. Coaches in Europe are using the OAA approach to
introduce non-Agile process change. And early reports indicate it is
working great. The OAA approach is broadly applicable, as the
'introducer' of any kind of process change.
In light of the foregoing, the following developments are well underway:
1. The core structure (begin in Open Space, experimentation with
new-process for 3++ months, then another Open Space to terminate a
passage rite structure) has been isolated as a base class or foundation,
called Prime/OS. This is now being published under an open source
license, with all that open-source licensing implies. I have spoken
about this here, in some detail, earlier. The core idea is found here:
http://newtechusa.net/agile/culture-technology-wants-to-be-free/
2. OAA is built on top of Prime/OS and is in fact a derivative work. As
such, OAA is also being published under an open source license, per the
rules of the Prime/OS license. You can see that here: www.prime-os.com.
What this means is that innovators are strongly encouraged to innovate,
using Prime/OS as a foundation. Also to modify it and thus to improve
it. OAA is an instance of an application that inherits Prime/OS as a
basic foundation. The "OS" in Prime/OS stands for Open Space and Open
Source.
3. Others who wish to create innovative derivative works like OAA are
strongly encouraged to do so. As such they are first required to honor
the terms of the Prime/OS open source license, or opt-out. Details on
open source licensing here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-source_license
4. There are others with substantial "culture tech" that will soon be
announcing availability of their work under open source licensing. This
is an emerging movement, and is not a flash in the pan. "Culture
technology wants to be free."
It is important to understand that the opt-in invitational approach,
inspired by Open Space (with the goal being learning via
experimentation, with the only constraint being the 12 principles of the
Agile Manifesto) is considered a heresy by the mainstream of the Agile
movement. Repeat, this is considered heresy, as in "it cant work. It
will not sell."
Really?
The "mainstreaming" of mandated Agile practices and forced-Agile
adoptions and related Agile coaching is a huge industry now. There are
lots of transactions and very few genuine transformations at scale. Yet
the top-down mandate is easily generating at least $US 100MM per annum.
I know of 2 outfits that are generating over 20MM each. This 100MM
number is quite conservative.
One consequence of OAA is that new demand for OST facilitation is being
generated. The OAA method guides coaches to avoid the OST Facilitator
role completely, in service to the org's overall learning. The guidance
is to bring a skilled Facilitator in, instead. Coaches become "members
of the family" and as such probably cannot be effective in the OST
facilitator role. Since a typical OAA implementaton includes at least 3
OST events, the arithmetic is very simple: 1000 OAA implementations
worldwide per year implies 3000 or more OST events inside organizations.
OAA's guidance to coaches is to bring a new Facilitator into each event.
This translates into much higher demand for skilled OST Facilitator
services.
It appears the Agile coaching community is about to tip, away from
mandates and towards invitations. At the Scrum Coaching Retreat, I have
found a core group of about 20 of the 80 attending who totally, totally
get this and are making moves. The rest are getting introduced to the
concepts via the book.
This story is emerging, and the early adopters who bring this forward
are writing it. It's these coaches from the Scrum Retreat and others who
are IN. They are the emerging /authors/ of the story and also the
emerging /characters/ in the story.
The next thing to happen is the publication of many short testimonial
videos along the lines of the 2 I have posted today. These will be
posted as public YouTube videos that anyone anywhere can embed in their
blogs and web pages.
These are some exciting times we live in.
Regards,
Daniel
On 10/29/14 7:20 PM, Suzanne Daigle wrote:
Dan,
No questions on "what the heck" you are doing just unabashed kudos on
these very compelling videos. A great gift! Why was I so hooked?
Because of the seriousness of the discussions, the level of detail
shared which demonstrates unequivocally the value and impact of Open
Space to the work at hand. I also appreciated the comments around the
difficulties of adjusting to the level of autonomy and freedom that is
such a contrast to how organizations traditionally operate. You opened
the space beautifully in the interviews which made it very safe for
the interviewees to share so honestly and openly.
These videos also make the point in ways that words and assertions may
not do as well, that introducing Agile in an Agile Open way is far
better than mandating it. The same would apply to all change
management approaches outside of Scrum and Agile.
I was also so pleased to hear how what Agile was doing was also being
felt by other areas (engineering I think is what one of the
interviewees quoted). I guess it is time for me to say: glad you've
stuck to your guns. You were right which I never doubted though you
also know how passionate I am introducing Open Space to other parts of
the organization. Your work will indeed pave the way. Bravo!
Giving you full credit, do I have your permission to share these with
clients? I look forward to seeing the other videos.
Thanks again Dan. So very very cool!
On Wed, Oct 29, 2014 at 5:18 PM, Daniel Mezick via OSList
<oslist@lists.openspacetech.org
<mailto:oslist@lists.openspacetech.org>> wrote:
Here are two short videos of people telling the tale of Open Agile
Adoption in their own words.
The Open Agile Adoption process (http://www.OpenAgileAdoption.com)
begins and ends in Open Space. In between, people /*play*/...er, I
mean /experiment/...with Agile practices. For 3 or 4 months.
They are free.
However, the game does have one small constraint: the Agile
Manifesto. So long as what they are doing does not obviously
conflict with the Agile Manifesto principles, they are absolutely
free to try absolutely any new practice they want to try, in
service to continuous improvement.
Video #1: Length 13 minutes.
A UX/Experience Design pro explains his skepticism and ultimate
shift... powered by Open Space.
https://twitter.com/DanielMezick/status/527506795968069632
Video #2: Length 15 minutes.
A Product person explains what he thinks and feels before and
after the Open Agile Adoption process.
https://twitter.com/DanielMezick/status/527566037211176960
Dozens more videos are on the way.
I hope you find these 2 initial narratives interesting, and I
welcome your questions about what the heck I am doing.
Regards,
Daniel
New to the Manifesto? Here it is:
http://agilemanifesto.org/principles.html
--
Daniel Mezick, President
New Technology Solutions Inc.
(203) 915 7248 <tel:%28203%29%20915%207248> (cell)
Bio <http://newtechusa.net/dan-mezick/>. Blog
<http://newtechusa.net/blog/>. Twitter
<http://twitter.com/#%21/danmezick/>.
Examine my new book:The Culture Game
<http://newtechusa.net/about/the-culture-game-book/>: Tools for
the Agile Manager.
Explore Agile Team Training
<http://newtechusa.net/services/agile-scrum-training/> and
Coaching. <http://newtechusa.net/services/agile-scrum-coaching/>
Explore the Agile Boston
<http://newtechusa.net//user-groups/ma/>Community.
_______________________________________________
OSList mailing list
To post send emails to OSList@lists.openspacetech.org
<mailto:OSList@lists.openspacetech.org>
To unsubscribe send an email to
oslist-le...@lists.openspacetech.org
<mailto:oslist-le...@lists.openspacetech.org>
To subscribe or manage your subscription click below:
http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org
--
Suzanne Daigle
Open Space Facilitator
NuFocus Strategic Group
FL 941-359-8877941-359-8877
Cell: 203-722-2009203-722-2009
www.nufocusgroup.com <http://www.nufocusgroup.com>
s.dai...@nufocusgroup.com <mailto:s.dai...@nufocusgroup.com>
twitter @Daiglesuz
Call
Send SMS
Add to Skype
You'll need Skype CreditFree via Skype
--
Daniel Mezick, President
New Technology Solutions Inc.
(203) 915 7248 (cell)
Bio <http://newtechusa.net/dan-mezick/>. Blog
<http://newtechusa.net/blog/>. Twitter <http://twitter.com/#%21/danmezick/>.
Examine my new book:The Culture Game
<http://newtechusa.net/about/the-culture-game-book/>: Tools for the
Agile Manager.
Explore Agile Team Training
<http://newtechusa.net/services/agile-scrum-training/> and Coaching.
<http://newtechusa.net/services/agile-scrum-coaching/>
Explore the Agile Boston <http://newtechusa.net//user-groups/ma/>Community.
_______________________________________________
OSList mailing list
To post send emails to OSList@lists.openspacetech.org
To unsubscribe send an email to oslist-le...@lists.openspacetech.org
To subscribe or manage your subscription click below:
http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org