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Tau Conference #3

In a month we will run our third internal conference. This is supposed to be a full-day event, with one-of-a-kind sessions prepared and presented by our team members.

Here is the program:

Tau Conference #3 Program

UX London 2011: UX, Agile, Meetings, Sketching

4 people from TargetProcess attended London UX Conference this year. It was a decent event and here are mine “take-aways”.

UX + Agile

Alan Cooper read a solid visionary lecture about UX future and adoption. The main trend is to mix agile software development practices with user experience teams. There is a new initiative called Balanced Team. He did not spend much time on this topic, but that is something I am curious about. We’ve been adopting UX + Agile at TargetProcess since 2009 and definitely want to do that efficiently.

It was nice to be reassured that we are going in the right direction as a company. We already do many things  Alan mentioned in his speech.

Visual Meetings

Our meetings might be better. Sometimes they are too long. Sometimes too boring. Sometimes there is no clear outcome. Quite many workshops and sessions at London UX 2011 were dedicated to better, more productive and more fun meetings. Sunni Brown ran a fantastic workshop:  The Art of Graphic facilitation (a.k.a. “How to Run A Workshop with Pictures”). It was very funny and useful. We had several short creative meetings and drew a lot of sketches. I highly recommend her Gamestorming book.

Kate Rutter’s session Design Patterns for Fantabulous Collaborations was very informative and I’ve learned new ways of running efficient meetings, but the practical part was a bit boring and out of context. Overall, after this conference I have a clear understanding how we can improve our meetings which is good. Best Practices for Facilitation looks like a “must read” book, but it seems you can barely purchase it.

We often do ad-hoc meetings, without any preparation. We go like “Let’s discuss this user story with filters”. However, such meetings should be planned. All attendees should be prepared. There should be a right balance of order and chaos. Our meetings are on the chaotic end, so we have a huge space to improve.

Sketching, Sketching, Sketching

Everybody should be able to sketch. It means we should train people to not be afraid to draw something and express information with words AND pictures. Adults often prefer to write and don’t like to draw their thoughts. Mostly because they’re wary of looking  “unprofessional” and “ridiculous”. We should break this prejudice. Sketching is a very powerful technique that allows people to try and express ideas blazingly fast. Bill Buxton wrote an incredible book Sketching User Experience. Read it and you will understand why sketching is so cool.

 

Agile Conferences: Look To No Epiphany

If we think about conferences in general, the traditional understanding is: people come together to share their knowledge, to learn, to discuss, to network etc.  Some people expect that if they attend a conference they for sure must learn something totally new, something that will change the way they work or even their lives.  Some people come to see who’s out there, to network and to have some fun. In a nutshell, as many people as many reasons to attend conferences :)

conference2

I tend to think that with all the  information we’re consuming, it’s very hard to come up with something totally new to a thinking and knowledgeable audience. If you’re engaged in agile community, and if you’re a thinking person, you thrive in the blogosphere and you practice agile  - it’s hardly that something will be totally new to you (“totally” is the keyword).

Recently we attended Agile Central Europe conference in Krakow. I’d say that my #1 enjoyment about this event was live cross-twittering. Broadcasting Agile CE to the Twittersphere has really been fun. I liked tweets by Andy Brandt, Marc Loeffler (aka scrumphony), Pawel Brodzinski and Robert Dempsey (for the two latter, it’s not only tweets, but their presentations that I enjoyed) .  As opposed to most attendees,  I didn’t very much like the closing show by Gwyn Morfey and Laurie Young. The guys have done a great show, but it was more about dramatic presentation of what’s going on in any dynamic agile team :) I’ve seen a bit of those “paper sword fights” :)

After attending Agile 2009 in Chicago, I’ve really got a little bit skeptical on the conferences overall because what I’ve seen was people talking about simple truths but with such an air as if they were uttering epiphanies. So, when going to Agile CE I wasn’t expecting epiphanies. It was more about going out there with our team, watching people and taking every opportunity to enjoy everything that comes up on the way  (including live jazz night in Krakow).

This approach worked better than huge expectations. Strangely, this small cosy conference has become an unexpected source of inspiration.  In a sense,  that it’s not always you have to come up with an excellent new topic or idea no one else knows about. The main thing about conferences is confidence and freedom to express yourself, share your personal experience and absorb experience of others. Somehow someone will find it useful. There’s no need to be afraid to appear too simple. People will listen and admire  even if this is your first experience as a speaker.

And.. it’s great that there’re many more agile conferences to come :)

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