ron statt - ncpmi

20

Upload: others

Post on 10-Feb-2022

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Ron Statt - NCPMI
Page 2: Ron Statt - NCPMI

Ron Statt

Page 3: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ Control the Change

Life Changes

Page 4: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ All Agile Methodologies can have Outliers

▪ Who are the Outliers?

▪ There’s no room for Outliers

▪ Including Outliers

Outliers and Agile

Page 5: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ The Six Month Directive

One Team’s Story

Page 6: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ First Impressions

Month One

Page 7: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ Making Progress

▪ Sharing Opinions

Month Two

Page 8: Ron Statt - NCPMI

Iteration N Iteration N+1 Iteration N+2

Design ConceptConcept Design:

Story Design:

Story Design:

Design Story

Design Story

Design Story

Implementation

Implementation

Implementation

Iteration…

Page 9: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ Collaboration Tactics

▪ Design Thinking Sessions

▪ User Research (Internal and External)

▪ Collaboration Spaces/Events

▪ Start with the End in Mind

Helpful Tools

Page 10: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ Steps

▪ Failing Fast (being agile)

▪ Research Spikes

▪ Using to counter opinions

Design Thinking

Page 11: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ Over the hump?

Month Three

Page 12: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ Use Your Consistency and Branding Efforts

▪ Style Guides

▪ Standards and Guidelines

▪ Accessibility (A11Y) Standards

▪ Tune-up Your Testing

Lessons Learned

Page 13: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ A Boardroom Breakthrough

▪ Lasting Successes

▪ For the executives/stakeholders

▪ For the team

Months 4-6

Page 14: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ From the doctors

▪ From the hospital

▪ From the research

Urgency

Page 15: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ For your company’s reputation

▪ For your reputation

▪ For your users!

Urgency

Page 16: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ Include your <x> as full members of your Agile team

▪ Use Design Thinking sessions for <design concepts, research spikes>

▪ Demo with the end in mind

▪ Use your organization’s standards to your advantage

▪ Log user feedback and share during retrospectives

▪ Consider how your choices affect your company, you, and your users

What can you change tomorrow?

Page 17: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ Ron Statt

[email protected]

▪ LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/ronstatt

▪ Lisa Morton

[email protected]

Thank You

Page 18: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ Armstrong, Ian. The Evolution of UX Process Methodology. https://uxplanet.org/the-evolution-of-ux-process-

methodology-47f52557178b . Accessed March, 2018.

▪ Beyer, Hugh. User-Centered Agile Methods. Morgan and Claypool, 2010.

▪ Chen, Eewei. Providing Just Enough Design Can Make Agile Software Delivery More Successful.

https://www.thoughtworks.com/insights/blog/providing-just-enough-design-can-make-agile-software-delivery-more-

successful . Accessed March, 2018.

▪ Cockton, Gilbert. Larusdottir, Marta. Gregory, Peggy. Cajander, Asa. Integrating User-Centred Design in Agile Development.

Springer, 2016.

▪ Cohn, Mike. Succeeding with Agile: Software Development using Scrum. Addison Wesley Professional, 2010.

▪ UXPin. The Guide to UX Design Process and Documentation (E-book). https://www.uxpin.com/studio/ebooks/guide-

to-ux-design-process-and-documentation/ . Accessed March, 2018.

▪ Design Thinking. Your Next Competitive Advantage. Forbes (online)

June 17, 2017

Further Reading

Page 19: Ron Statt - NCPMI

▪ From “The Agile Dictionary”

▪ A task aimed at answering a question or gathering information,

rather than at producing shippable product.

▪ Sometimes a user story is generated that cannot be well estimated

until the development team does some actual work to resolve a

technical question or a design problem.

▪ The solution is to create a “spike,” which is some work whose

purpose is to provide the answer or solution.

Defining a Spike

Source: http://agiledictionary.com/209/spike/

Page 20: Ron Statt - NCPMI