February 6, 2011

Animating Developers, 4 months later

Four months ago I had a chance to present Agile Skills Project and experiments we do at TouK, to create a learning ecosystem and culture of constant improvement. Time to report progress of our experiments.

Map of New Ideas

The request came from our HQ (Headquarters, which is our group of main company owners): lets use Jira to gather ideas and initiatives about how to improve our company. You know, Keizen style.

The reasoning is, that though some people, including myself, always loudly present their opinions, new concepts, and basically try to change the company from the ground up (whether the stakeholders like it or not), others need some encouragement and a safe way to suggest ideas for improvement.

Our map of new ideas is a simple Jira project, where anybody can suggest anything he/she thinks is worthwhile. The new idea is verified by a group responsible for deciding whether it's in line with company's profile and possible with our current resources. If so, the idea and needed resources, are assigned to someone who, from now on, is responsible for making it happen. It doesn't have to be the person proposing the idea, but quite often it is. The ideas are also grouped by the area they correspond to, one from culture, evolution, fitness, relations, survival or contribution.

As for the moment, our statistics look as follow:
  • Proposed: 36
  • Selected: 6 (waiting for a victim)
  • Assigned: 8 (but not started yet)
  • Ongoing: 6
  • Refused: 1
  • Finished: 26

Things that appear on the map vary, including for example other experiments described here (Weekly Workshops, OCRs), open sourcing some libraries, drawing diagrams of all the systems we create for our main clients (very useful for new developers) or creating database environment for regression tests on Oracle.

As you see, it goes quite well, and I believe it's a great way to get your developers involved in the company improvement. As a side effect, people feel they have more influence over where the company is heading, which is always good and gives a nice motivational kick (“Hey look, now I'm not only building software, I'm building my company as well!”).

Thing to remember: this is a map for company-wide ideas. In the beginning there was a confusion over whether stuff about how to improve one's project/team should be here, but since our teams are self-organized, there is no need to involve the rest of our company. The power is in one's hands anyway.


Weekly Workshops


Every Friday at 4pm, we have a one hour long technology workshop open to everyone. It usually takes the form of a lecture, with slides, some coding, and examples, but the form is open. Other features are not, and that is very important for it's success.

This is a concept I've borrowed from Supermedia Interactive, when Piotr Szarwas was still the head of the development department and my boss. I'm sure it's popular in many companies, but Piotr taught me how to do it correctly.

The goal is to share knowledge and learn new things.

The date and time are set in stone. Every Friday, 4pm. It's during our work hours, so we had to choose time, which won't stop or slow down our normal development. Since our sprints are week long, Friday 4pm is usually after the retrospective anyway. Let's face it: at 4pm on Friday, we are either busy putting down some fires, learning, or slacking off anyway.

Everyone can present anything, as long as there are people who want to listen to. We keep a calendar on confluence for coordination. We also have a page with suggested topics, where people put things they would like to listen about, for others to pick up and investigate. One rule is very important thought: if we do not have a volunteer for next Friday, we are going to pick one.

Yes, the participation (as a lecturer) is mandatory for everyone. It basically means, each developer should give at least one lecture per year. No excuses.

At first, there was some turmoil about that. People do not like to be forced to do anything. But the first drawing showed that it's a good idea. Randomly chosen people were giving great presentations. The reason is, that everyone has something interesting to show, it's just that a carrot of general appreciation is not enough sometimes. Sometimes you also need a stick. That's how a human mind works.

So what are our workshops about? Here are a few topic examples:
  • Clojure – lisp for java programmers.
  • Rapid Application  Development using Grails and Vaadin
  • Smartclient: RAD even faster.
  • Apache Hadoop and projects around it.
  • JBoss Envers – easy entity auditing
  • How to get users from Gmail and Facebook: OAuth 2.0, OpenId, Spring Security and Spring Social in web applications


Weekly OCRs

I've already described that  in here so I'm not going to repeat myself. What has changed, is that we have it on a weekly basis, we have it split in two: java and database OCRs separately, and that we have designated people responsible for making it happen (not for leading the meeting, but for choosing a victim, if there is no volunteer).

Java OCRs are held on Friday at 3pm, for all the same reasons as given above for workshops.

I've noticed that some people see it as a chance to brainstorm and refactor some really troublesome code, they work with, which they normally do not want or have no time to touch. That is a great idea, and since we use our own code for OCRs, and since we actually try to commit the changes, it's more like getting help for your project, than only sharing some thoughts.

Database teams do it in a little different way, but not being there, I'm not inclined to explain it.


Quest system during work hours

The quest ecosystem described on Agile Skills Project web site, about which I've been talking on Agile Warsaw is a great self-motivational tool, but the question we had, was how a company can help people get it started? My idea was, that having everyone choose his own mentor and booking an hour a month to talk with him about the progress or lack thereof, can do the trick. But that assumes, people are working back home to meet their goals, which is not true for everyone. Witek Wolejszo wanted to check whether making it a work-time activity will spread the technique to those, who don't want to use their free time.

Eight people with different background and free time activity were chosen for a month long experiment, where they would choose an educational goal and try to achieve it within working hours.

The feedback was generally negative. People complained for these main obstacles:

low quest priority (everything for the client is more important) ends with process starvation
quests as defined were things to be done alone, and we prefer working with other people (pairs)
no motivation from quest done for yourself only, when it doesn't have an immediate use and no one else is waiting for the outcomes

At the same time people didn't think it was a totally bad idea, but would rather like, if quests were somehow corresponding to our current products and projects and had defined timeboxes.

This made us close the experiment and start with two others, described below. We do not know yet how these will work out.


Task exchange board.

When creating a backlog for a project, there are usually some tasks for which the domain knowledge available to team members is not needed. This include investigation into new libraries and technologies (spikes), setting up things very technology oriented (auditing by Jboss Envers, excel export via  Apache POI, etc.), creating black-box and/or open source libraries, writing proof of concepts or collecting and releasing some tools from the project as an Open Source libraries. All those tasks are candidates for Task Exchange Board.

When a backlog is done, the team can decide which tasks to put onto the board. These should be estimated like on a sprint planning, should have a defined time expectation or a timebox (in case of spikes) and Definition of Done.

Once on the Board, anyone in the company, even from different project or department, as long as he has enough time (i.e. his PM/team leader has nothing against it), can pick up an interesting task and do it using the budget of the team which created the task.

This way, people can do something important and interesting in a new technology, on full time, without changing the current project. If you have enough of what you are doing, this may be a productive brake for you. If you are currently only supporting some existing project or waiting for bug reports, why not to do something interesting and learn something new on the way? This may be a equivalent  of a quest for those, who do not have any time at home.

These tasks, may also be done by members of the team which created them.

One important thing has to be understood: since the team creating the task doesn't know who is going to take it, it's up to the guy taking the task, to finish within or before estimated time. Basically, if you are not sure you can finish this on time, or do not want to risk spending your free hours on it, don't take it. This should not slow down the development time. If it did, no team would put another task on the board.


What technologies you want to work with?

This time-fridge contains
technologies we do not use anymore.
ZX-Spectrum, Commodore 64,
Commodore 128; Amstrad,
Macbook Air...
Old kind of stuff.
We are an old company :)
We have a team of guys responsible for assigning people to new projects or moving them between existing. This team has a sky level view on what's currently going on in the whole company, all new and planned projects.

So far, the team was making up decisions based on their own perspective of what one is capable of. We wanted to change it a bit, to make TouK a better place for people who feel a rush on some technology, so we created a confluence page, where everyone can submit what technologies he would like to work with.

Now, this looks very simple, but frankly speaking, I wasn't aware (and I believe nobody else was) of how often some of technologies would be mentioned by different people. As an effect, we can see now, that we have a lot of developers wanting to take part in a full-Grails, Java free project. While in theory, every team can decide for itself, what technologies it uses, seldom someone would take such a drastic, risky step, as changing the language for the whole project. By gathering information about what people would like to work with, we can create a team very dedicated and motivated to use some technology. That may pay off pretty well.

We shall see, whether the guys assigning people to projects, will take that into account.

More to go
There is a lot of stuff, we haven't tried yet. This includes for example mentoring, RPG character cards, exchanging knowledge with other companies by switching developers for a few days. Hopefully, I'll have more to report in a few months.

8 comments:

  1. LOL @ time-fridge. Whose idea was that? (well, this Macbook Air is a little hint).

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  2. @pawelz: Hard to tell. But since the fridge was DOA (Dead On Arrival), Macbook Air somehow seems like a good fit (Defective By Design). 8-bit computers are still operational, though.

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  3. Can't wait for futher informations. I'm mostly interested in how your company deals with spikes :)

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  4. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  5. Kuba,
    First of all, I'm glad you described your experiences. I had an occasion to see your presentation during AgileWarsaw meeting and was looking forward to hearing about the results.

    We started to organize our workshops/techtalks about 6 months ago. But we didn't make the presentation obligatory for everyone (you mentioned one of the arguments against this idea). Unfortunately many developers say that they have no free time to prepare a good presentation. How do you deel with that problem? Maybe, your colleagues are allowed to work on the presentation during workhours ? If not, do these non-volunteer guys complain about being made to do sth after work ?

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  6. @Karol Yes, we are "allowed" to prepare during work hours, but to get the whole picture, you need to know that we usually do not do micromanagement at TouK, and as a result you are responsible for planning and managing your own time, and getting the work done.

    Most people give a presentation on a subject that they are already using at work (Guava, Spring Social, MVP and command pattern in GWT, Acrtiviti, and so on), so it's much easier because you don't have to spend so much time to get prepared. Some, show the stuff they work on at home anyway (Vaadin, Grails, Smartclient) because they think it's cool. We have a page, where everybody can post what they would like to hear about, so we can pick up and include this stuff in our new projects (like Jboss Envers), to get all the needed experience. This way it's really easy and not time consuming.

    But the “mandatory” part is important, imho. For all those guys who were complaining I had this to say: your employer wants YOU to learn something new, because he wants YOU to be worth more, so he can pay YOU more money. How cool is that? This is part of your job, you are getting paid for it. Yes, you can do it during work hours, but you have to find those work hours by yourself. You have a whole YEAR to find it, and if you think you don't have time to do it, that's ok, maybe you really don't, but let me first check at the firewall how much time you spend on demotywatory.pl...

    So far, nobody was complaining any further.

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  7. @Jakub - I have another question. You mentioned that Touk is thinking about exchanging employees with other companies. If your company is so open, are you taking under consideration opening your meetings for other, not hired persons? That would be truly awsome! :)

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  8. The idea is nice, but I smell a few problems that would have to be solved first:

    a) we have a small conference room, for max 15 people (or 20 employees as we are so relaxed it's fine with us to seat on the floor). Sometimes people cannot join the meeting, because the room is full already.

    b) some people are shy and may not want to show their presentations to strangers. I'd rather have our people happy than be more open.

    c) during workshops we often have 'inside-talks' about how the topic relates to our internal projects. This of course is non public information and would require NDA for any outsiders.

    All together it's a bit risky subject. Let us see whether we can cooperating with other companies first, before we become so public.

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