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If enterprises hope to thrive in today’s constantly evolving business environment, they will have to innovate. And to innovate, their knowledge workers are going to have to work together — to collaborate — to meet market opportunities with competitive products and services. But while collaboration relies on open communication and an atmosphere of trust, it doesn’t mean sitting in a circle holding hands and singing Kumbaya. In this issue, we’ll discuss how you can promote collaboration in your organization to produce business results. Hear about one team that was handed a project a year behind schedule and a quarter-million dollars in the hole. After collaboratively replanning the entire project, self-assigning tasks, and fending off the command-and-control encroachments of the larger organization, the team delivered the project within budget and ahead of schedule. Discover how to "lift others" and "increase safety" in order to maximize people’s contributions, but also how to close down discussions that have gone off topic so you can continue to make progress. There’s a fine line between "Two heads are better than one" and "Too many cooks spoil the broth" — join us and learn how you can walk that line.
July 31, 2007 | Authored By: Jenni Dow, Kent McDonald
Software development today is heavily influenced by large companies with a desire for a global presence. Growth happens through mergers and acquisitions and new development in emerging markets.
April 30, 2007 | Authored By: Lise Hvatum
In this Advisor, Jim Highsmith shares his list of the top 30 books on agile project leadership. Reading -- or even better, reading and discussing -- these books would be a good New Year's resolution for furthering project leadership in your organization.
January 18, 2007 | Authored By: Jim Highsmith
Thomas Friedman's book The World Is Flat [3] has finally disappeared from the Top Ten books list, but for more than a year it was a must-read for anyone interested in understa
January 31, 2007 | Authored By: Patrick Moroney
I've been thinking recently that the term "self-organizing" has outlived its usefulness in the agile community and needs to be replaced. While self-organizing is a good term, it has, unfortunately, become confused with anarchy in the minds of many. Why has this occurred?
September 13, 2007 | Authored By: Jim Highsmith
I attended my son's graduation from college yesterday. That should be an unqualified joyous celebration, except my son graduated in engineering from Virginia Tech University, in Blacksburg, Virginia, USA.
May 15, 2007 | Authored By: Dwayne Phillips
In a perfect world, companies adopting an agile software development process would implement the process Jonathan Addelston and Theresa O'Connell describe in their Cutter Executive Report "Usability and the Agile Project Managem
September 30, 2007 | Authored By: Carol Barnum