I Signed the Oath of Non-Allegiance

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Alistair Cockburn, in the Oath of Non-Allegiance, has issued a call to action for the software development community to stop bickering and calling out contending methodologies. He has called for “discussion about whether an idea (agile plan-driven impure whatever) works well in the conditions of the moment.” As someone who has earned his PMP, CSM , received certificates from the Lean Enterprise Institute, and who completed David Anderson’s Kanban Coaching workshop – I have had the opportunity to see this bickering up close. I have occasionally even as the target of it.  Here is Alistair’s call to action:

I promise not to exclude from consideration any idea based on its source, but to consider ideas across schools and heritages in order to find the ones that best suit the current situation.

This is becoming an increasing familiar theme. We see it in Laura Brandeburg’s Business Analyst Manifesto. It is expressed by by Liz Keogh, Jean Tabaka and Eric Willeke in “A Community of Thinkers”. I am involved in a PMI Agile team where we are trying to make sense out of the benefits associated with bringing together the PMI Body’s of Knowledge (Portfolio, Program, and Project) in the context of Agile. I am working with the IIBA’s Agile Business Analyst core team to express the Business Analysis Body of Knowledge in an Agile fashion. I also participate in various Yahoo and Google groups where we are working at having these kinds of conversations involving Kanban and Lean.

These teams and discussion groups bring together practioners and thought leaders from various communities working to understand and to share. Sometimes the discussions get heated. You have a lot of successful, intelligent people sharing their experiences and trying to make sense out of their successes while simultaneously trying to expand their world view. The awesome thing is that there is a lot of learning and connecting going on in these communities.

You may want to protect your turf -  but this is the future. The tools and resources that support software development have improved orders of magnitudes in the last two decades. It’s crazy to believe we don’t have a long way to go to figure out the best ways to deliver software – especially at the enterprise.  Tom Peters quotes General Eric Shinseki, Chief of Staff, U.S. Army – “If you don’t like change, you’re going to like irrelevance even less.” I choose to join the community who is looking for ways to honor the fundamental premise of the Agile Manifesto – We are uncovering better ways of developing software by doing it and helping others do it.

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2 Responses to “I Signed the Oath of Non-Allegiance”

  1. Jean Tabaka says on :

    Dennis,

    As usual, nicely put! I value your passion in bringing out the best in all of us as a community in a positive way. Thanks for tracking the various movements around this and bringing them to us in a nice package :-)

    Jean

  2. Dennis Stevens says on :

    Thank you for your kind remarks.

    I look forward to seeing you in Orlando.

    Take care,

    Dennis

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