Don’t talk about it…

Don’t talk about it…

I got some very sage advice at a conference recently about using the Agile method of delivering projects and that is …. Don’t talk about it (just do it).

However based on some of the gormless questions then asked, I thought I’d put my tuppence worth in writing for anyone one who wants to know how it works.

I’ve been using Agile for a good few years now and am a total advocate of it. There are many more evangelical supporters than me, so I won’t preach to you how you’re doing everything wrong if you’re not using it already. I will say it gets great results quickly and can give a traditional waterfall run organisation a kick up the proverbial ass. It can work for non I.T. projects too but I will talk about it in relation to web site development.

How it works

Agile project delivery is basically achieved by a number of time boxed intervals of work – typically a 2 week development cycle and a 2 week test cycle but it can be less or more depending on what your organisation’s needs are. These units of time are called sprints.

In case you were wondering this is how some organisations are able do weekly, daily or even hourly releases.

While there’s still a need for usual preparation work of scope, analysis, architecture, designs, art work etc. you no longer need Gantt charts and the like. (Note: These tasks can also be managed by sprints.)

Instead there’s a brainstorming session with the product owner, a scrum master and the project development team who come up with a shopping list of requirements called a product backlog. Burn down charts can be used to track progress should they be needed.

An initial product backlog can be very broad; every item will need a description, analysis and an estimate. A product backlog that starts out as short and vague will become longer and more concrete as time goes on. Items slated for implementation soon will be the first to be refined; clarified, better defined, split into smaller chunks.

After product backlog refinement, the product owner prioritizes what they want done first. The development team estimate the time required for each task. This helps the product owner prioritize what they want developed and in what order throughout the project development life cycle. The scrum master will highlight inter-dependencies etc. to the product owner, this is called sprint planning. At the end of sprint planning the team will be clear on what work will be completed and how it will be accomplished. They then work off a sprint backlog. The development team may also make task boards to work off for themselves.

While the developers are coding, the System Integration Testers start their preparation. When the developers are ready to deploy their code, the testers then execute their test cases on that code and voila there’s a deliverable called aproduct increment ready to be User Acceptance Tested by the business.

When a product increment is delivered it is as per the shared understanding ofdefinition of done as agreed initially by the whole team.

After each sprint there’s an informal sprint review and retrospective session with all team members where they review where they are, what worked well and what did not. Tweaks are then made to the process.

Then sprint planning starts again (or started in parallel to previous sprint) and the whole cycle repeats ad infinitum until the project is complete or until the project sponsor runs out of funds.

Who said anything about rugby?

The project is managed by daily stand up meetings called scrums that are run by ascrum master. The start of the day is best but anytime that suits the team is fine. The idea is to work through a visual snap shot of the project; this is achieved with ascrum board – which can be physical or digital. Physical is where all tasks have been written on yellow or coloured stickies during sprint backlog planning and digital is where it has been typed into a spreadsheet or an online project management tool such as Trello.

The scrum master does not have to be the project manager but can be, especially on smaller projects. A ‘neutral’ scrum master or a program manager works very well where there’s multiple project managers throughout the course of a project.

During scrum each team member gets 2 minutes to say what they have worked on in the last 24 hours, what they will work on in next 24 hours and what, if any, are their impediments. The scrum master must help them, or find help for them, to overcome their impediments. The scrum master will also facilitate other meetings as necessary.

The scrum board will usually be laid out in a grid, with four columns for the tasks in different states. All the sprint backlog tasks are listed in column one. In the second column are all the tasks currently being worked on. As each team member speaks they should move their task from one column to the next as they progress (i.e. column three is ‘Ready to test’ and column four is ‘Done’) and as tasks are complete choose the next relevant thing for themselves to work on from the sprint backlog. The product owner can provide guidance on what’s required next.

Studies, practice and experience show the yellow (mostly) stickie setup works really well and team members feel more engaged physically moving the stickies than using online versions. Someone (Project Manager or Scrum Master) also needs to maintain the online version for the auditors. Of course, an online version helps with reporting.

Someone at the conference I alluded to in my introduction asked what happens if the stickies lose their stickiness and fall down. One word: Sellotape.

I can testify at the end of the project there’s nothing more satisfying than seeing all the stickies over in the done pile! I also think, that apart from having a crack team of developers and a switched on Scrum Master, a tuned in Product Owner is key to the success of these kinds of projects.

Summary

The scrum team’s members (product owner, development team, scrum master) collaborate to create a series of product increments, during short time boxed intervals called sprints. Each increment meets the team’s shared definition of done. The team work from a product backlog which in turn is broken into a sprint backlog as they refine the product backlog over time and plan each sprint. They self organize to do the development and meet at a daily scrum to ensure that they deliver the best possible product increment. They end each sprint with a review and retrospective.

Further reading

If you’d like to read more, the Agile Manifesto came to life in 2001. Then Ken Schwaber with others later founded the Scrum Alliance and created the Certified Scrum Master programs and it’s derivatives. Scrums values are: Focus – Courage – Openness – Commitment – Respect.

Dear (find a new job) Diary

Dear (find a new job) Diary

End Aug 2025 Sydney

Recruiters often reach out when you’re head down (and I would never bail on a current commitment) but a big construction company reached out to me, so I took the bait as I know my current contract is up mid Nov. Even though their in-house recruiter didn’t seem to know the first thing about HR software projects or what relevant acronyms meant he was fixated on cyber security, he did at least call me in person but whatever I said it put him off & I never heard back. No matter, I’m not in a rush but it does seem to take 3 months to secure a role (per ex colleagues).

Mid Sept 2025

Did 45 exploratory applications for jobs with Seek & LinkedIn for the craic like (many looked liked data gathering rubbish – mysterious government jobs in Canberra advertised by Indian names who never reply 🤣)

Result: Nada (bar a handful of automated emails where I’m guessing no human even saw my cv).

Mid Oct 2025 

Seek stats told me on average 500 (so called) applicants applied for those jobs which are now all closed, in 2022 when I last was looking it was 100. Population increase in Sydney in those 3 years is only 300,000 which leads to me believe many of those 500 applicants are not real. 

Conclusion: Seek & LinkedIn applications are pointless.

Next move…  contacted every recruiter who ever contacted me in the last 3 years. Most ignored me but the ones who know me called me back (thank you) plus I made friends with a few new ones & it was really good talking to humans actually, hiring managers on the other hand seem to be absolute time wasters who won’t even have an initial chat …

Had 2 calls for the same job from 2 different recruiters, who quizzed me about each other 🤪, first red flag the company couldn’t pick a lane! Some crowd who needed “someone like me” asap for the exact same job I’m doing now … Hiring manager wouldn’t even have a screening call with me & then a week or two later “oh they are going with a business PM” … for a software implementation!! Good luck with that, time wasters.

Got a lead for a NSW government dept. contract role, rate too low, initial term too short but got talked into applying, they refused to even have a chat as I wasn’t an SME in a certain “low code platform”, I’m a very experienced technical project manager and an ex-programmer with an amazing track record delivering many digital transformations on different platforms, I do not need to be an SME in any “low code” platform. Short sighted time wasters.

Another lead (from Sept.) for a NSW gov. dept., doing what I’m doing now, sounds like perfect fit… a month later “it’s too close to the holidays they are waiting till new year” newsflash it’s still October! You know what …. then it’ll be Easter, then it’ll be EOFY, then it’ll be winter school holidays, oh please, spare me cause you’ll never recruit with that mind set!

Big Indian Tech company reaches out on LinkedIn, I hand over all relevant details. And… they ghost me. 👻 

Nov 2025

Next lead: very interesting new transformation government job which would be 3 weeks wfh / 1 week interstate. I would ❤️❤️❤️ this. 2 weeks later, nada, not even a screening call with the hiring manager. Dead in water? 🤷‍♀️ I hope not but not very encouraging so far.

Connection on LinkedIn (thank you) sent me a lead for another gov dept., emailed recruiter who is on the job advert … told me she’s on leave (why is her email on a job advertised an hour ago?!) & to contact her colleague, did that, no response. Sigh.

Mid Nov 2025

Call from a recruiter in an actual company about a role in the new year – phone tag so far, so let’s see …

Current contract over, officially on on job market 17th Nov. Going to sub contract myself for home decoration work for free 😂 (in my own home!) for now…. NZ trip planned in school holidays when all of Australia will be on a go slow anyway … not in a rush but would be nice if something was locked in on the horizon, perfectly happy with 5th Feb when schools gone back. Manifesting…. 🤞

Hope to see you in a fortnight for more updates ….

1 Dec 2025
Well what a fortnight it’s been, did no home decorating or decluttering as we had some medical drama in our house, so I had to be full time parent, its ok now though.

But the interstate job I really wanted called me for interview on 24/11, a cyclone hit it so it got postponed, did finally see them on 28/11 where my Apple laptop decided not to work with MS Teams, so I quickly had to pivot and get connected with the phone, only wasted 2 mins but it felt like a lifetime! Inauspicious start.

Was interviewed by 4 men, which was a bit daunting but they very nice and there was no stupid questions about strengths and weaknesses etc. Recruiter told me to focus on the kind of project they are doing and specifically talk about relevant experience only, I had 30 mins so had to talk fast. They also asked why I’d like to work there, which he also told me to be ready for. It went well, there was no rabbit in headlights moment for me and I got to ask a few questions. And that was it, I raked over it for an hour after and then they called my recruiter to talk about rates! Promising. Meanwhile I recommended someone else for another role and they got offered the job, so was hoping for good karma on the networking front.

I sent some follow up questions the next morning and thanked them while reiterating why I was the best person for the job. Monday morning they replied saying they were sorting the rate out as I was the preferred candidate. That afternoon they called with an offer, as proposed by the recruiter on Friday.

Ecstatic is not the word for how I am feeling. 2 weeks off work, spoke to a few recruiters, 1 interview, and bam … done. No hundreds of Seek or LinkedIn applications. Last time it took 3 months and I had to kiss a lot of frogs, so to speak! Just goes to show the right recruiter is worth their weight in gold, and keeping dialogues open, during the year, with recruiters pays off. Very thankful and I start on 15/12.