Last week I went to Berlin for the very first Agile Lean Europe conference.
ALE2011 was one of the many ideas that originated during the World Café session hosted by Jurgen Appelo during XP2011 in Madrid. As I’m a lazy fellow, I suggest you read the history of ALE2011 in this blogpost from Olaf Lewitz, instead of me writing it down.
I was involved in the organisation of ALE2011 on the community sofa, and I can assure you this was a crazy adventure. Planning a conference with more than 40 organizers can be quite chaotic! But thanks to some natural leaders like Olaf & Marcin the chaos evolved into self organisation. They shared their experience of organizing it during the conference in a session.
On Tuesday evening I flew to Berlin after a day of work at my client’s office. When I met the other participants in the hotel bar, I could already feel that this conference was going to be special. There was excitement in the air. Something new was going to happen! I also understood the success of eXtreme Tuesday Club, when UK agilists explained me that this was exactly the format of XTC. Having a good time together in a bar, drinking a beer and sharing stories. This is why I believe the Agile Belgium Drinkups have a good future ahead of them.
On Wednesday morning, the conference officially started with a warmup session by John Jagger. He involved the entire audience in his cyber dojo, which was quite an achievement, knowing that there were more than 200 people in the room!
Next was a keynote by Rachel Davies. I really like her style. Very down to earth and honest. One message she brought was that Enterprise Agility may not be possible at all, a statement that I hear more often popping up in the community. It was strengthened later in the conference by Brian Marick during his lighting talk, stating that we ‘Europeans’ can choose to quit these big enterprises and start up a business of our own. Especially since we have a healthcare system 🙂
In the afternoon Open Space, I proposed a session about healthy KPI’s, a problem I’ve been struggling with at clients. Adopting agile is fine, but do we just keep our old KPI’s? I feel that in most organisations theser are no longer suited and trigger the wrong behaviour. We experimented a little bit with using trends instead of single point measurements, but without a good feeling. On the last day, Dave Snowden reassured us during his keynote that KPI’s are not useful and should be left aside. Maybe that’s a little harsh. I’d prefer what Bjarte Bogsnes said during his keynote about Beyond Budgeting. A KPI should start from a goal and be revised constantly. I will experiment with this in detail to figure this out.
On Thursday evening we had a dinner with strangers. The concept goes as follows:
- The organization reserved places in several restaurants across Berlin.
- You sign up for a restaurant and have dinner with people you haven’t met before.
I went to a Spanish restaurant with 6 other conference attendants and had a great time eating tapas and chatting late in the evening. (watch the sparkle in our eyes!)
This proved to be a great way to meet new people. It should be part of every conference!
Friday started again with some sessions and an open space. After lunch we listened to some more lighting talks and did a conference retrospective. Ken Power did a great job facilitating. I was quite honored that he used one of the exercises of my blog, called retrospective starfish.
The event was closed by a keynote from Dave Snowden and a thanks to all organizers.
In the evening I flew home with Yves Hanoulle, who made the trip much more enjoyable by being quite the storyteller.
I didn’t get to see much of the city, because I didn’t want to miss a second of the conference. Here’s a picture of ‘Checkpoint Charlie’, the one place I visited in Berlin.
The ALE conference had a great first edition. I’m looking forward to next year. Who knows, maybe it will be held in Brussels!
Very interested in learning more about Agile security methods. As I understand Agile did not include security idealogy in their Agile Manifesto. So has there been any discussion in these meetings as to how Agile works in security assurance in their Agile processes?
I am asking this information as part of a research paper for my Masters degree in Computer Security.
I would like to join this club or group and meet one of these days in Europe!
I don’t recall any session specific targeting agile & security.
You might want to check the program here: http://ale2011.eu/
You’re right, the agile manifesto says nothing about security. It’s pupose is to set a high level frame on this ‘other’ approach to software development, by summarizing it in values & principles, not by providing an ‘agile manual’.
There are many agile communities you can reach out to in Europe & the rest of the world, to find help with your specific questions.
I’m sure there are a lof of people out there who had to deal with these questions in an environment that was security sensitive.
Cheers,
Nick Oostvogels