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Jason Tice speaks about the Friesian breed, blogger and freelance writer Susan Friedland of Saddle Seeks Horse about her blogging adventures, and Horse Illustrated's style expert Raquel Lynn about how to have a horsey holiday season. Listen in...Horse Illustrated HORSES IN THE MORNING Episode 2815 – Show Notes and Links:Hosted by: Sarah Conrad, Digital Content Editor of Horse Illustrated & Young Rider and Glenn the Geek, host of Horses in the Morning.Title Sponsor: Straight Arrow Family of ProductsPresenting Sponsor: Horse IllustratedSPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER FROM HORSE ILLUSTRATED: For the holiday season, treat yourself with a year subscription to Horse Illustrated AND gift a subscription to another horsey friend or family member for only $24.95. That's two subscriptions for one low price, but the sale only lasts through the holiday weekend. Visit www.horseillustrated.com/blackfriday anytime between Thursday, November 25th and Tuesday, November 30th.Guest: Jason Tice, Executive Director of the Friesian Horse Association North AmericaGuest: Susan Friedland of Saddle Seeks Horse - Susan's articles on HorseIllustrated.comGuest: Raquel Lynn of Horses and Heels and Stable Style - Raquel's articles on HorseIllustrated.com - Raquel's article on Horsey Holiday EntertainingMagazine articles mentioned in this episode: Visit Horse IllustratedThere's an App for that! Check out the new Horse Radio Network app for iPhone and AndroidFollow Horse Radio Network on Twitter or follow Horses In The Morning on FacebookMark your calendars for the FB Live HRN Holiday Concert featuring Templeton Thompson and Sam Gay and your chance to win Thousands of dollars in prizes including your choice of any Wintec Saddle. Cyber Monday Nov 29th at 8pm. You Must tune in live to have a chance to win, it will hosted on many FB pages including Horse Radio Networks. And right before the concert at 7:30 we will be holding the HRN Holiday Trivia competition t give away more prizes. Monday Nov 29th at 8pSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=87421)
Jason Tice speaks about the Friesian breed, blogger and freelance writer Susan Friedland of Saddle Seeks Horse about her blogging adventures, and Horse Illustrated's style expert Raquel Lynn about how to have a horsey holiday season. Listen in...Horse Illustrated HORSES IN THE MORNING Episode 2815 – Show Notes and Links:Hosted by: Sarah Conrad, Digital Content Editor of Horse Illustrated & Young Rider and Glenn the Geek, host of Horses in the Morning.Title Sponsor: Straight Arrow Family of ProductsPresenting Sponsor: Horse IllustratedSPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION OFFER FROM HORSE ILLUSTRATED: For the holiday season, treat yourself with a year subscription to Horse Illustrated AND gift a subscription to another horsey friend or family member for only $24.95. That's two subscriptions for one low price, but the sale only lasts through the holiday weekend. Visit www.horseillustrated.com/blackfriday anytime between Thursday, November 25th and Tuesday, November 30th.Guest: Jason Tice, Executive Director of the Friesian Horse Association North AmericaGuest: Susan Friedland of Saddle Seeks Horse - Susan's articles on HorseIllustrated.comGuest: Raquel Lynn of Horses and Heels and Stable Style - Raquel's articles on HorseIllustrated.com - Raquel's article on Horsey Holiday EntertainingMagazine articles mentioned in this episode: Visit Horse IllustratedThere's an App for that! Check out the new Horse Radio Network app for iPhone and AndroidFollow Horse Radio Network on Twitter or follow Horses In The Morning on FacebookMark your calendars for the FB Live HRN Holiday Concert featuring Templeton Thompson and Sam Gay and your chance to win Thousands of dollars in prizes including your choice of any Wintec Saddle. Cyber Monday Nov 29th at 8pm. You Must tune in live to have a chance to win, it will hosted on many FB pages including Horse Radio Networks. And right before the concert at 7:30 we will be holding the HRN Holiday Trivia competition t give away more prizes. Monday Nov 29th at 8pSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=87421)
We kick things off with a discussion of recent Florida weather and the perils of streaming television. Next, Bruce Williams, University of Georgia alum and season ticket holder for 40 years and counting, joins the show to talk all things Bulldogs. The backroads to Athens, the best BBQ in Georgia, favorite bowl game trips, his contempt for Steve Spurrier, and more. Then, Dangerous Dave Sweeney makes his debut appearance on the podcast. We play the hits from Lutz-Yelton 206: the tuna fish pillowcase, flag football suspensions, the hairless rat, and many more!This Week's Roadmap:Cavalcade of Sound (0:01-0:50)Opening Monologue (0:51-15:13) -Table Setting and Market Shoutouts -The Never-Ending Rain in Florida -Dial-Up Television: The Perils of Streaming Cable -Ross Perot Brought Humor to the 1992 Presidential Debates -Guest PreviewsBruce Williams Interview (15:14-49:16) -Larry Munson is Enthralled by Lindsay Scott's Touchdown -Guest Intro -His First UGA Football Game in 1978 -Date Nights at Sanford Stadium with Jana -Season Ticket Holder Since 1979 -His Connection to the Ticket Office -His Athens Weekend Routine -Strickland's Restaurant -Holcomb's BBQ -Brunswick Stew Talk -Attending Georgia-Florida Every Season Except One -Tailgating at Georgia-Florida in Jacksonville -Being on the Sideline for the 1980 Sugar Bowl (National Title) -The 17-18 National Title Game vs. Alabama -Best Bowl Game Memories -New Orleans Talk -Road Trips to other SEC Stadiums and the Most Hostile Fans -Most Bitter Rivalries -Florida-Georgia Fan Populations in Nassau County, FL -Writing Tuition Checks to the University of Tennessee -Knowledge of Georgia Roads -Favorite UGA Figures -Most Reviled SEC Figures -Gameday Routine for 2020 -Considering a Condo in Athens -Predictions for this Season -More Spurrier TalkDave Sweeney Interview (49:17-1:38:56) -Joseph Laurent and I Tell the Tuna Fish Pillowcase Story -Guest Intro -High School Wrestling Stories and Getting Recruited to Gardner-Webb -Tuna Fish in Dave's Pillowcase -Tuna Fish in a Dorm Neighbor's Heating & Air Window Unit -A Bed Frame Prank -The Missing Control Knobs from the Room 206 Heating & Air Unit -The Vibe on Mauney Ground Floor -Evan Rhodes was not a Fan of Special K Cereal -The Hairless Rat Story -The L2 Crew Intramural Basketball Team -Dave the Enforcer in Flag Football -Dave's Flag Football Suspension -Showdown with Jason Tice in Softball -Midnight Water Balloons -Woody the Janitor Talk -The Penny Locking Craze -Playing Basketball against Adam "the Beaver" Sweeney -Wofford Basketball TalkBob for Coroner (1:38:57-1:39:12)
This week's opening segment looks at the relationship between college sports and college enrollment and also dissects a report about a Bud Light enthusiast calling his shot at a convenience store in Shelby. Then, noted raconteur Micah Martin shares some of his most amusing travel stories. He also tells some tales from the many weddings he has officiated. Afterwards, Jason Tice stops by to regale us with some Lutz-Yelton nostalgia talk, including our big field trip to ride the much-heralded Charlotte Light Rail in 2007.This Week's Menu:Cavalcade of Sound (0:01-1:47)Opening Monologue (1:48-20:48) -Market Shoutouts and Table Setting -Thoughts on College Sports and College Enrollment -News Report and Comment: Shelby Man Needs his Bud Light -Guest PreviewsGeorge Likes the Blankets Untucked (20:49-21:14)Micah Martin Interview (21:15-1:10:45) -Guest Intro -Mayodan Talk -Putting the Moves on Aubree -Ben Perdue ("Band Perped") Impressed Micah -Getting a Speeding Ticket his First Time in a GWU Car -"It Won't Go": Breaking Down on I-40 in Winston-Salem -A College Fair Without Electricity -Gatlinburg Talk: The Bearskin Lodge and Shopping for Jeans -A Fellow Passenger's Incident with Tiger Beer on a Flight from Nepal -The Odyssey of the Blue Moon Hotel in India -Leaving his Jeans Behind in Gatlinburg -John Blalock's Wedding *Kathy Houser's Coronavirus Scare *Balloon Shirt Talk *Blalock's Attire *Blalock's Dancing Skills -Officiating Weddings Generally -His Role in Sparkler Gate -Hannah and I Nearly Forgetting to Sign our Marriage License -A Wedding Music Snafu -A Wedding Weather Snafu -Yum Yum Restaurant in Greensboro *Two Chairs, No Waiting in the Men's Room *Hit by a SUV -Case Farms Chicken Truck Crashes into Spangler Dorm -The Truck Stop Cuties BandAll Aboard the Charlotte Light Rail (1:10:46-1:11:25)Jason Tice Interview (1:11:26-1:43:33) -Guest Intro -GWU's Upset of Kentucky in 2007 and the Resulting Celebration -The Big 2007 Field Trip to Charlotte *Skating Debacle at WBT's Holiday on Ice *Riding the City's New Light Rail -No Tickets Needed -Monopoly Money Change *Calling the Keith Larson Show *Locked In: A Broken Door Knob -Jason's Ill Fated Trip to Ron's Barber Shop -Woody the Janitor Talk *Jason Tice: Charter Member of Woody's Fan Club *Life Lessons with Woody *Woody Not a Fan of Telemarketing *His Expectations for the Lutz-Yelton Commodes -Intramural Memories *Pick Sixes in Flag Football/Punching the Ground *Spencer Blevins Goes Rogue in Softball -Reflections from Living with Evan Rhodes -Lessons Learned in ParentingChicken with a Side of Mucus (1:43:34-1:44:24)
Serious Play Game based on “The Advantage” with Jason T. Jason Tice, Business Innovation Consulting Practice Lead Building Safety With "The Advantage" - Play Test - Agile Games 2018, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BuGvo4wJNG4
Why should a job interview for a role on an Agile team follow the traditional interview format with high anxiety and low level of psychological safety? How do you find people who are natural collaborators? Jason Tice, VP of business innovation at Worldwide Technology, spoke with Agile Amped about using collaborative activities, or games, during job interviews to gather feedback and assess necessary skills. Tice says creating a safe space where candidates are willing to be vulnerable is a game changer for finding the right candidates for high-performing teams. Hosted by Howard Sublett. This episode of Agile Amped is part of a series in partnership with the Business Agility Institute. Register for the Business Agility Conference in New York March 14-15, 2018 and use code solutionsiq-founding-member to save 25% off registration: businessagilityconf.com/ Find Jason Tice on Twitter: @TheAgileFactor And find our podcast host: @howardsublett Podcast library: www.agileamped.com Connect with us on social media: Twitter: twitter.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/agileamped Instagram: www.instagram.com/agileamped/
This week I bring #NoEstimates to Cory Bryan’s agile podcast – The Deliver It Cast. [featured-image single_newwindow=”false”]Ryan Ripley Presenting #NoEstimates [/featured-image] For the past ten years, Ryan Ripley has worked on agile teams in development, ScrumMaster, and management roles. He's worked at various Fortune 500 companies in the medical device, wholesale, and financial services industries. Ryan is great at taking tests and earned the PMI-ACP, PSM I, PSM II, PSE, PSPO I, PSD I, CSM, CSPO, CSP, and CAL 1 agile certifications. He lives in Indiana with his wife Kristin and three children. Ryan blogs at ryanripley.com, hosts the Agile for Humans podcast available on iTunes, and is on Twitter @ryanripley. In this episode you'll discover: What is #NoEstimates How #NoEstimates impacts the work of Product Owners Why data (not guesses) help teams make better decisions and deliver value sooner The very awesome agile podcast: The Deliver It Cast Links from this weeks episode: Deliver It Cast EP58 – No Estimates with Ryan Ripley Agile for Humans EP20 – #NoEstimates with Vasco Duarte The #NoEstimates Movement with Ryan Ripley Barry Overeem – The #NoEstimates Movement Matt Heusser – Why You Execs Don’t Get Agile and What You Can Do About It Book of the week: [callout]Most start-ups fail. But many of those failures are preventable. The Lean Startup is a new approach being adopted across the globe, changing the way companies are built and new products are launched. Eric Ries defines a startup as an organization dedicated to creating something new under conditions of extreme uncertainty. This is just as true for one person in a garage or a group of seasoned professionals in a Fortune 500 boardroom. What they have in common is a mission to penetrate that fog of uncertainty to discover a successful path to a sustainable business. Click here to purchase on Amazon.[/callout] [reminder]What are your thoughts about this episode? Please leave them in the comments section below.[/reminder] Want to hear a podcast about the getting started with speaking at technical conferences? — Listen to my conversation with Don Gray, Tim Ottinger, Amitai Schleier, and Jason Tice on episode 32. We discuss how to write a compelling abstract, what track reviewers are looking for in a submission, and how to give yourself the best change of getting selected. One tiny favor. — Please take 30 seconds now and leave a review on iTunes. This helps others learn about the show and grows our audience. It will help the show tremendously, including my ability to bring on more great guests for all of us to learn from. Thanks! This podcast is brought to you by Audible. I have used Audible for years, and I love audio books. I have three to recommend: Agile and Lean Program Management by Johanna Rothman The Lean Startup by Eric Ries Rolling Rocks Downhill: The Fastest, Easiest, and Most Entertaining Way to Learn Agile and Lean by Clark Ching All you need to do to get your free 30-day Audible trial is go to Audibletrial.com/agile. Choose one of the above books, or choose among more than 180,000 audio programs. It's that easy. Go to Audibletrial.com/agile and get started today. Enjoy! The post AFH 073: #NoEstimates on The Deliver It Cast appeared first on Ryan Ripley.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This weeks episode is a recording of the Advanced Scrum session that I (@ryanripley) presented at the Path to Agility Conference 2017. [featured-image single_newwindow=”false”]Ryan Ripley Presenting Advanced Scrum at #Path17[/featured-image] For the past ten years Ryan Ripley has worked on agile teams in development, ScrumMaster, and management roles. He's worked at various Fortune 500 companies in the medical device, wholesale, and financial services industries. Ryan is great at taking tests and earned the PMI-ACP, PSM I, PSM II, PSE, PSPO I, PSD I, CSM, CSPO, CSP, and CAL 1 agile certifications. He lives in Indiana with his wife Kristin and three children. Ryan blogs at ryanripley.com, hosts the Agile for Humans podcast available on iTunes, and is on Twitter @ryanripley. In this episode you'll discover: How coercion keeps people from adopting Scrum and Agile practices Why sometimes it’s uncomfortable to be a Scrum Master When responsibility can help a team improve performance What make Scrum so difficult for large organizations Slides from the talk: [slideshare id=77431189&doc=advancedscrumpath17-170702015103] [callout]Most startups fail. But many of those failures are preventable. The Lean Startup is a new approach being adopted across the globe, changing the way companies are built and new products are launched. Eric Ries defines a startup as an organization dedicated to creating something new under conditions of extreme uncertainty. This is just as true for one person in a garage or a group of seasoned professionals in a Fortune 500 boardroom. What they have in common is a mission to penetrate that fog of uncertainty to discover a successful path to a sustainable business. Click here to purchase on Amazon.[/callout] [reminder]What are your thoughts about this episode? Please leave them in the comments section below.[/reminder] Want to hear a podcast about the getting started with speaking at technical conferences? — Listen to my conversation with Don Gray, Tim Ottinger, Amitai Schleier, and Jason Tice on episode 32. We discuss how to write a compelling abstract, what track reviewers are looking for in a submission, and how to give yourself the best change of getting selected. One tiny favor. — Please take 30 seconds now and leave a review on iTunes. This helps others learn about the show and grows our audience. It will help the show tremendously, including my ability to bring on more great guests for all of us to learn from. Thanks! This podcast is brought to you by Audible. I have used Audible for years, and I love audio books. I have three to recommend: Agile and Lean Program Management by Johanna Rothman The Lean Startup by Eric Ries Rolling Rocks Downhill: The Fastest, Easiest, and Most Entertaining Way to Learn Agile and Lean by Clark Ching All you need to do to get your free 30-day Audible trial is go to Audibletrial.com/agile. Choose one of the above books, or choose between more than 180,000 audio programs. It's that easy. Go to Audibletrial.com/agile and get started today. Enjoy! The post AFH 071: Advanced Scrum with Ryan Ripley [PODCAST] appeared first on Ryan Ripley.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
(@chrismurman) joined me (@RyanRipley) to discuss Agile from an executive viewpoint and if it’s time to refactor agile.Chris Murman [featured-image single_newwindow=”false”]CHRIS MURMAN AT AGILE COACH CAMP 2017[/featured-image] is constantly in search of ways to make the work we do better. This means bringing a lean focus to the products we make, a holistic approach to agile business processes, or an intense focus on the technologies of tomorrow. You can read his thoughts on agile and software development on his blog. He is a board member of the Agile Uprising and co-hosts the Agile Uprising Podcast.Chris In this episode you'll discover: Why “it depends” is not always a great answer How executives view agile according to a recent survey: Over half of CIOs regard Agile development as “discredited” (53%). Three-quarters (75%) are no longer prepared to defend it. Almost three-quarters (73%) of CIOs think Agile IT has now become an industry in its own right. Half (50%) say they now think of Agile as “an IT fad”. Learnings from the recent Agile Coach Camp in New York Links from the show: Chris Murman’s Thoughts on Refactoring Agile Executive Don’t Think We Are Doing Agile Right The 6point6 white paper referenced on the podcast Agile Coach Camp Agile Uprising [callout]Most startups fail. But many of those failures are preventable. The Lean Startup is a new approach being adopted across the globe, changing the way companies are built and new products are launched. Eric Ries defines a startup as an organization dedicated to creating something new under conditions of extreme uncertainty. This is just as true for one person in a garage or a group of seasoned professionals in a Fortune 500 boardroom. What they have in common is a mission to penetrate that fog of uncertainty to discover a successful path to a sustainable business. Click here to purchase on Amazon.[/callout] [reminder]What are your thoughts about this episode? Please leave them in the comments section below.[/reminder] Want to hear a podcast about the getting started with speaking at technical conferences? — Listen to my conversation with Don Gray, Tim Ottinger, Amitai Schleier, and Jason Tice on episode 32. We discuss how to write a compelling abstract, what track reviewers are looking for in a submission, and how to give yourself the best change of getting selected. One tiny favor. — Please take 30 seconds now and leave a review on iTunes. This helps others learn about the show and grows our audience. It will help the show tremendously, including my ability to bring on more great guests for all of us to learn from. Thanks! This podcast is brought to you by Audible. I have used Audible for years, and I love audio books. I have three to recommend: Agile and Lean Program Management by Johanna Rothman Scrum: The Art of Doing Twice the Work in Half the Time by Jeff Sutherland The Lean Startup by Eric Ries All you need to do to get your free 30-day Audible trial is go to Audibletrial.com/agile. Choose one of the above books, or choose between more than 180,000 audio programs. It's that easy. Go to Audibletrial.com/agile and get started today. Enjoy! The post AFH 070: Refactoring Agile with Chris Murman [PODCAST] appeared first on Ryan Ripley.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Allison Pollard (@allison_pollard) and Barry Forrest (@bforrest30) joined me (@RyanRipley) to discuss co-presenting at agile conference and advanced team dynamics. [featured-image single_newwindow=”false”]ALLISON POLLARD, AGILE COACH & CONSULTANT AND PROUD GLASSES WEARER[/featured-image] is an Agile coach with Improving in Dallas, Texas, Allison Pollard helps people discover their Agile instincts and develop their coaching abilities. Allison is also a Certified Professional Co-Active Coach, a foodie, and proud glasses wearer.Allison As a Principal Consultant with Improving in Dallas, Barry is a web developer, Scrum Master, and Agilest. Barry loves helping make work life better for teams and leaving things in a better state than when he was introduced to the situation. Barry is also an award-winning homebrewer and an avid amateur photographer.Barry In this episode you'll discover: How modes of communication impact team dynamics The importance of co-presenting and the lessons it can bring Why learning communication preferences breeds a stronger culture Links from the show: DiSC Personality Profile Allison’s Blog Site Barry’s Blog Site [callout]Most startups fail. But many of those failures are preventable. The Lean Startup is a new approach being adopted across the globe, changing the way companies are built and new products are launched. Eric Ries defines a startup as an organization dedicated to creating something new under conditions of extreme uncertainty. This is just as true for one person in a garage or a group of seasoned professionals in a Fortune 500 boardroom. What they have in common is a mission to penetrate that fog of uncertainty to discover a successful path to a sustainable business. Click here to purchase on Amazon.[/callout] [reminder]What are your thoughts about this episode? Please leave them in the comments section below.[/reminder] Want to hear a podcast about the getting started with speaking at technical conferences? — Listen to my conversation with Don Gray, Tim Ottinger, Amitai Schleier, and Jason Tice on episode 32. We discuss how to write a compelling abstract, what track reviewers are looking for in a submission, and how to give yourself the best change of getting selected. One tiny favor. — Please take 30 seconds now and leave a review on iTunes. This helps others learn about the show and grows our audience. It will help the show tremendously, including my ability to bring on more great guests for all of us to learn from. Thanks! This podcast is brought to you by Audible. I have used Audible for years, and I love audio books. I have three to recommend: Agile and Lean Program Management by Johanna Rothman Scrum: The Art of Doing Twice the Work in Half the Time by Jeff Sutherland The Lean Startup by Eric Ries All you need to do to get your free 30-day Audible trial is go to Audibletrial.com/agile. Choose one of the above books, or choose between more than 180,000 audio programs. It's that easy. Go to Audibletrial.com/agile and get started today. Enjoy! The post AFH 069: Dynamic Teams with Allison Pollard and Barry Forrest appeared first on Ryan Ripley.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
“In Part 2 of our discussion on Mobility Innovation, we talk about how Ideation plays an important role in the process to achieve results and outcomes. Listen in as WWT experts Dan Huber, Tim Cappel and Jason Tice talk about how the Ideation process works and how it helps deliver successful outcomes to any organization.”
Kim Brainard (@Agilebrain1) and Billie Schuttpelz (@OopslandBillie) joined me (@RyanRipley) to discuss how our brains work at the AgileIndy Conference in Indianapolis, Indiana. [featured-image single_newwindow=”false”]Billie Schuttpelz presenting at Agile Indy[/featured-image] Kim has over 8 years of Agile experience and 15 years' experience in IT project planning, implementation, and execution. She is skilled in building interaction and collaboration among organisations to drive change, support key business objectives, and maximize value creation across enterprise environments. She recently served as Co-Chair for Scrum Alliance’s Global Gathering 2017 and is very active in the agile community. Billie is a “force of nature,” breaking up the boulders blocking transformation, and building bridges between technical people and business partners. She applies the perspective gained in a 20-year career, including engagements in five countries, to provide dynamic creativity and positive energy to everything she does. Billie's ability to make the impossible seem possible is what powers Agile transformations. Her passion for life shines through, so plan a hallway chat today! In this episode you'll discover: Why speakers looks nervous before their talks How “training from the back of the room” enhances learning The power of giving our brains a break Links from the show: Training from the Back of the Room by Sharon Bowman Connect with Kim on LinkedIn Connect with Billie on LinkedIn [callout]Most startups fail. But many of those failures are preventable. The Lean Startup is a new approach being adopted across the globe, changing the way companies are built and new products are launched. Eric Ries defines a startup as an organization dedicated to creating something new under conditions of extreme uncertainty. This is just as true for one person in a garage or a group of seasoned professionals in a Fortune 500 boardroom. What they have in common is a mission to penetrate that fog of uncertainty to discover a successful path to a sustainable business. Click here to purchase on Amazon.[/callout] [reminder]What are your thoughts about this episode? Please leave them in the comments section below.[/reminder] Want to hear a podcast about the getting started with speaking at technical conferences? — Listen to my conversation with Don Gray, Tim Ottinger, Amitai Schleier, and Jason Tice on episode 32. We discuss how to write a compelling abstract, what track reviewers are looking for in a submission, and how to give yourself the best change of getting selected. One tiny favor. — Please take 30 seconds now and leave a review on iTunes. This helps others learn about the show and grows our audience. It will help the show tremendously, including my ability to bring on more great guests for all of us to learn from. Thanks! This podcast is brought to you by Audible. I have used Audible for years, and I love audio books. I have three to recommend: Agile and Lean Program Management by Johanna Rothman Scrum: The Art of Doing Twice the Work in Half the Time by Jeff Sutherland The Lean Startup by Eric Ries All you need to do to get your free 30-day Audible trial is go to Audibletrial.com/agile. Choose one of the above books, or choose between more than 180,000 audio programs. It's that easy. Go to Audibletrial.com/agile and get started today. Enjoy! The post AFH 068: Agile Workshops with Kim Brainard and Bille Schuttpelz appeared first on Ryan Ripley.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kalpesh Shah (@AgileBrightSpot) joined me (@RyanRipley) to discuss his work with Scrum Team at the AgileIndy Conference in Indianapolis, Indiana. [featured-image single_newwindow=”false”]Kalpesh Shah front and center with a few people in the back you may recognize[/featured-image] Kalpesh is the Director of Agile Transformation at IntraEdge Inc., as well as a public speaker, trainer, and coach. He helps organizations transition to the Agile way of working, employs Lean Product Development approaches, and instills a Lean Startup mindset. His latest passion is Culture Hacking via continuous experimentation, which promotes innovative thinking, extends openness, and brings design thinking into teams. In this episode you'll discover: The dangers and risks of turning teams in to backlog lumberjacks Experimenting with the boundaries of Scrum for fun and profit Why engineers needs to see the value of the work they are doing Links from the show: Kalpesh’s Stand-up Poker: www.standuppoker.com Beyond User Stories: Taking Your Team to the Next Level of Awesome Connect with Kalpesh on linkedin [callout]Most startups fail. But many of those failures are preventable. The Lean Startup is a new approach being adopted across the globe, changing the way companies are built and new products are launched. Eric Ries defines a startup as an organization dedicated to creating something new under conditions of extreme uncertainty. This is just as true for one person in a garage or a group of seasoned professionals in a Fortune 500 boardroom. What they have in common is a mission to penetrate that fog of uncertainty to discover a successful path to a sustainable business. Click here to purchase on Amazon.[/callout] [reminder]What are your thoughts about this episode? Please leave them in the comments section below.[/reminder] Want to hear a podcast about the getting started with speaking at technical conferences? — Listen to my conversation with Don Gray, Tim Ottinger, Amitai Schleier, and Jason Tice on episode 32. We discuss how to write a compelling abstract, what track reviewers are looking for in a submission, and how to give yourself the best change of getting selected. One tiny favor. — Please take 30 seconds now and leave a review on iTunes. This helps others learn about the show and grows our audience. It will help the show tremendously, including my ability to bring on more great guests for all of us to learn from. Thanks! This podcast is brought to you by Audible. I have used Audible for years, and I love audio books. I have three to recommend: Agile and Lean Program Management by Johanna Rothman Scrum: The Art of Doing Twice the Work in Half the Time by Jeff Sutherland The Lean Startup by Eric Ries All you need to do to get your free 30-day Audible trial is go to Audibletrial.com/agile. Choose one of the above books, or choose between more than 180,000 audio programs. It's that easy. Go to Audibletrial.com/agile and get started today. Enjoy! The post AFH 067: Backlog Lumberjacks with Kalpesh Shah [PODCAST] appeared first on Ryan Ripley.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Joshua Kerievsky (@joshuakerievsky) joined me (@RyanRipley) to discuss Modern Agile at the AgileIndy Conference in Indianapolis, Indiana. [featured-image single_newwindow=”false”]Joshua Kerievsky Presenting Modern Agile[/featured-image] Joshua is the founder and CEO of Industrial Logic, a pioneering Extreme Programming/Lean consultancy that radically improves the software development capabilities of organizations around the globe. Today, he leads an effort to modernize Agile by removing outdated practices and leveraging the best of what the software community and other industries have learned about achieving awesome results. Modern agile practitioners work to Make People Awesome, Make Safety A Prerequisite, Experiment & Learn Rapidly and Deliver Value Continuously. Joshua is an international speaker and author of the best-selling, Jolt Cola-award-winning book, Refactoring to Patterns, numerous Agile eLearning courses, and popular articles like Anzeneering, Sufficient Design and Stop Using Story Points. In this episode you'll discover: How Modern Agile has improved on past practices to help make teams awesome Why safety is critical to agility, and how without safety your practices and methodologies are pointless The role that continuous learning plays in an organization Links from the show: Industrial Logic Modern Agile AgileIndy Conference Lean Startup by Eric Ries The Fifth Discipline by Peter Senge Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg [callout]Most startups fail. But many of those failures are preventable. The Lean Startup is a new approach being adopted across the globe, changing the way companies are built and new products are launched. Eric Ries defines a startup as an organization dedicated to creating something new under conditions of extreme uncertainty. This is just as true for one person in a garage or a group of seasoned professionals in a Fortune 500 boardroom. What they have in common is a mission to penetrate that fog of uncertainty to discover a successful path to a sustainable business. Click here to purchase on Amazon.[/callout] [reminder]What are your thoughts about this episode? Please leave them in the comments section below.[/reminder] Want to hear a podcast about the getting started with speaking at technical conferences? — Listen to my conversation with Don Gray, Tim Ottinger, Amitai Schleier, and Jason Tice on episode 32. We discuss how to write a compelling abstract, what track reviewers are looking for in a submission, and how to give yourself the best change of getting selected. One tiny favor. — Please take 30 seconds now and leave a review on iTunes. This helps others learn about the show and grows our audience. It will help the show tremendously, including my ability to bring on more great guests for all of us to learn from. Thanks! This podcast is brought to you by Audible. I have used Audible for years, and I love audio books. I have three to recommend: Agile and Lean Program Management by Johanna Rothman Scrum: The Art of Doing Twice the Work in Half the Time by Jeff Sutherland The Lean Startup by Eric Ries All you need to do to get your free 30-day Audible trial is go to Audibletrial.com/agile. Choose one of the above books, or choose between more than 180,000 audio programs. It's that easy. Go to Audibletrial.com/agile and get started today. Enjoy! The post AFH 066: Modern Agile with Joshua Kerievsky [PODCAST] appeared first on Ryan Ripley.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lisa Crispin (@lisacrispin) and Amitai Schleier (@schmonz) joined me (@RyanRipley) to discuss co-presenting at conferences, co-writing books, and agile testing. [featured-image single_newwindow=”false”]Lisa Crispin and Janet Gregory Co-Presenting a Conference Talk[/featured-image] Lisa is a tester who enjoys sharing her experiences and learning from others. She is the co-author, with Janet Gregory, of More Agile Testing: Learning Journeys for the Whole Team (Addison-Wesley, 2014) and Agile Testing: A Practical Guide for Testers and Agile Teams (Addison-Wesley, 2009). Lisa is a tester on a fabulous agile team. She specializes in showing testers and agile teams how testers can add value and how to guide development with business-facing tests. Amitai is a software development coach, speaker, legacy code wrestler, non-award-winning musician, award winning bad poet, and the creator of the Agile in 3 Minutes podcast. He blogs at schmonz.com and is a frequent guest on Agile for Humans. Amitai has published many of his agile observations and musings in his new book – Agile in 3 Minutes on Lean Pub. In this episode you'll discover: How to get started in conference speaking with co-presenting The joys and techniques of writing a book with a partner What is being observed in the agile testing world today Links from the show: More Agile Testing: Learning Journeys for the Whole Team Agile Testing: A Practical Guide for Testers and Agile Teams Lisa’s website: lisacrispin.com Self.Conference – May 19th and 20th [callout]Janet Gregory and Lisa Crispin pioneered the agile testing discipline with their previous work, Agile Testing. Now, in More Agile Testing, they reflect on all they've learned since. They address crucial emerging issues, share evolved agile practices, and cover key issues agile testers have asked to learn more about. Packed with new examples from real teams, this insightful guide offers detailed information about adapting agile testing for your environment; learning from experience and continually improving your test processes; scaling agile testing across teams; and overcoming the pitfalls of automated testing. You'll find brand-new coverage of agile testing for the enterprise, distributed teams, mobile/embedded systems, regulated environments, data warehouse/BI systems, and DevOps practices. Click here to purchase on Amazon.[/callout] [reminder]What are your thoughts about this episode? Please leave them in the comments section below.[/reminder] Want to hear another podcast about the getting started with speaking at technical conferences? — Listen to my conversation with Don Gray, Tim Ottinger, Amitai Schleier, and Jason Tice on episode 32. We discuss how to write a compelling abstract, what track reviewers are looking for in a submission, and how to give yourself the best change of getting selected. One tiny favor. — Please take 30 seconds now and leave a review on iTunes. This helps others learn about the show and grows our audience. It will help the show tremendously, including my ability to bring on more great guests for all of us to learn from. Thanks! This podcast is brought to you by Audible. I have used Audible for years, and I love audio books. I have three to recommend: Agile and Lean Program Management by Johanna Rothman Scrum: The Art of Doing Twice the Work in Half the Time by Jeff Sutherland The Lean Startup by Eric Ries All you need to do to get your free 30-day Audible trial is go to Audibletrial.com/agile. Choose one of the above books, or choose between more than 180,000 audio programs. It's that easy. Go to Audibletrial.com/agile and get started today. Enjoy! The post AFH 062: Agile Testing with Lisa Crispin [PODCAST] appeared first on Ryan Ripley.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
You know what happens at conferences: surrounded by so many thought leaders and industry colleagues and inundated with information from sessions, workshops, games, lightning talks, etc., your brain gets overloaded. "Knowledge paralysis" sets in, where you learned so much that you can't remember any of it. That's what prompted Jason to bring his "Fun Over Study" learning lounge idea to Agile Alliance Technical Conference 2016. The learning lounge is an experiment (and experience) aimed at helping conference-goers apply and reinforce learnings obtained during the conference. There's nothing new to learn at the lounge: conference-goers bring the knowledge from sessions attended and the lounge facilitators figure out how to create an experience that locks in the learning, reinforces and makes it applicable beyond just the conference. SolutionsIQ's Leslie Morse hosts. About Agile Amped The Agile Amped podcast series engages with industry thought leaders at Agile events across the country to bring valuable content to subscribers anytime, anywhere. To receive real-time updates, subscribe at YouTube, iTunes or SolutionsIQ.com. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/SIQYouTube, http://bit.ly/SIQiTunes, http://www.solutionsiq.com/agile-amped/ Follow: http://bit.ly/SIQTwitter Like: http://bit.ly/SIQFacebook
Hosts Ryan Ripley, Don Gray, Tim Ottinger, Amitai Schlair, Jason Tice Discussion Ryan Ripley (@ryanripley), Don Gray (@donaldegray), Tim Ottinger (@tottinge), Amitai Schlair (@schmonz), and Jason Tice (@theagilefactor) got together to discuss strategies for submitting talks to agile conferences and how to help the chances of your presentation getting accepted. **DISCLAIMER: This is an independent podcast that is not affiliated with or represents the views of any of the conferences mentioned on the show. Every person on the podcast speaks at conferences across the United States and around the world. We've also had our talks rejected at many conferences as well. While there isn't a silver bullet that guarantees success in this space, there are ways to increase the odds that your talk will fit in with the needs of the organizers and delight the attendees. It's our hope that this episode helps those new to public speaking get their ideas out in to the world and to give veterans of the conference scene fresh ideas on how to get more of their talks potentially accepted. And then…we called it a night. Will you help the Agile for Humans podcast grow? Please review Agile for Humans on iTunes or Stitcher and leave your comments on the blog site. Help your friends and co-workers find Agile for Humans by sharing your favorite episodes with them. Thanks for all you do to support the show. Agile for Humans is brought to you by audible.com – get one FREE audiobook download and 30 day free trial at http://www.audibletrial.com/agile Resources, Plugs, and More Ryan – https://ryanripley.com Path to Agility Conference – May 25 & 26 in Columbus, OH Don – http://www.donaldegray.com/ Coaching Beyond the Team Tim – http://agileotter.blogspot.com/ Industrial Logic Agile Otter Blog Agile in A Flash by Tim Ottinger and Jeff Langr Amitai – http://www.schmonz.com/ Agile in 3 Minutes on LeanPub.com [PODCAST] Agile in 3 Minutes Podcast Jason – http://www.thisagilelife.com/ [PODCAST] This Agile Life Agile Games 2016 Agile Coach Camp US 2016 The post AFH 032: How to Improve Your Agile Conference Submissions [PODCAST] appeared first on Ryan Ripley.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Craig Buchek and Jason Tice both attended the August 2015 St. Louis Agile LINC user group meeting
Craig and Renee are at Agile 2015 in Washington, DC and in the open jam area team up with Jason Tice and Natalie Simonsen from the “This Agile Life” podcast for a crossover episode. Joining in the roundtable conversation are Stephen Vance, Troy Tuttle, Jenny Tarwater, Abby Bangser and Serge Beaumont. Stephen Vance shares highlights from … Continue reading →
Jason Tice and Natalie Simonsen Discussion Now that the Agile2015 conference has concluded, join Natalie Simonsen and Jason Tice for a round-robin discussion of their key take-aways and themes from the week
ThisAgileLife celebrated a “winning” episode recorded immediately after guest Dan Parker and Jason Tice won prizes at the Agile2015 “Night at the Museums” vendor raffle event. Jason and Dan were joined by Melanie Hopwood and Charles Elsner (also attending the conference) to discuss sessions they attended on Wednesday, August 5, 2015.