tisdag 1 maj 2012
Farliga Idéer (Alf Rehn)
This is a book that promises to shock and disgust. The author sets out to shake the current corporate culture regarding creativity and innovation, which in his opinion is too nice, consensus-seeking and comfortable. Parallels are drawn to punk rock and medieval heretics, all in the hope of awakening passion in a culture that has become luke warm and "lagom".
One interesting detail is the definitions the author uses for the term creativity and innovation respectively. Creativity is the unhampered creation of new and radical ideas. Innovation is creativity with a touch of realism, which imposes limitations on the ideation process with the purpose of reaching tangible results. In other words, creativity is thinking new stuff up, while innovation is getting new things done (my interpretation of the author's definitions.)
Was I shocked and shaken by this book? Not really. I still think this is an important contribution to the discourse around innovation and creativity. I fully agree with the author that it is far too easy to hop on the cozy creativity band wagon, and buy the message from nice creativity consultants with fun games geared towards making the audience feel good about themselves. On the other hand, I worry a bit about the new generation of creativity consultants that this school of thought may foster. It's far too easy to create a cargo cult around this message, where conflict and friction are artificially introduced, just because Alf Rehn says you can't have creativity without it.
söndag 22 april 2012
The Leprechauns of Software Engineering (Laurent Bossavit)
The book was an interesting, albreit somewhat discouraging read. Bonavit is very eloquent and argues his case in a clear and humoristic way. He effectively tears down the current body of research in software engineering. The chapters where he will suggest a better road ahead are still missing.
As a researcher in this area, currently struggling to define a reliable method for validating a metrics model, I can certainly agree with most of what Bonavit is saying. I especially agree that we suffer from discipline envy. We tend to forget that software engineering really is a social science, where terms such as defects or cost are not absolute units of observation but rather open to interpretation that varies between individuals, projects and organizations.
I'm looking forward to reading the finished book with the constructive part included. As a discipline, we are still quite immature, and we can all benefit from taking a look in the proverbial mirror and trying to weed out our own leprechauns.
onsdag 18 april 2012
Building Blocks of Agile Innovation (Oza and Abrahamsson)
Building Blocks of Agile Innovation is a book that summarizes the findings of a large European research project. It reads as a collection of separate papers, the quality of which is varies greatly. Some chapters are really insightful and well written, while others are barely readable, sometimes due to unfortunate language problems. The book is freely downloadable as a pdf. Below I describe my favourite chapters.
Chapter 3: Agile Principles and Innovation Enablement by Nilay Oza and Jari Still
This is one of my favourite chapters in the book. The authors list the principles of agile development and compare them to the current state of the art in innovation. The finding is not surprising: agile methods inherently support innovation. Especially the emphasis on interaction with the customer and on supporting the motivation of the decelopers are seen as innovation enablers.
But there are still many things companies can do to support innovation, according to the authors. Ensuring that there is time for innovation is one such thing. Providing an innovation infrastructure with clear visibility for and fast feeback on new ideas is another.
Chapter 9. Innovation Challenges in an Agile Context by Minna Pikkarainen, Kaisa Koskela and Xiaofeng Wang
The authors describe a case company trying to improve their innovation. They have an innovation database, but are not seeing the benefits they want from it. The challenges found are related to both inefficient innovation handling and incorrect application of agile methods. Examples of the former are that not everybody has access to the innovation database and resources for analysing the database are not allocated. Examples of the latter is project managers unwilling to yield their power and lack of coordination between Scrum teams.
Random ideas and quotes
- Luke Hohman, Innovation Games
- Install an idea repository, in order to not lose any good ideas.
- Creativity is a characteristic of an individual, and a prerequisite for innovation, whereas innovation is the process of transforming an innovation into action within an organization.
måndag 2 april 2012
Tribal Leadership (Logan, King, Fischer-Wright)
The first impression is positive, as the authors set the scene by explaining the vast amount of research (10 yrs, 25000 subjects) that forms the base for this work. Still, the languge is easy on the brain, and it is clear that a substantial effort has been invested in making the book accessible to a wide audience.
The authors describe five stages that organizations and individuals may go through. Each of the stages are summarized as a t-shirt slogan that a person in that stage may wear. Of course the stages are described in detail as well, but I found the slogan to be especially helpful as a memory tool. Each of the stages are illustrated using real case examples from various fields, starting with criminals for stage one and ranging to extremely productive medical research companies for stage five. The picture below is a screenshot of my notes of the overview of the five stages, with the t-shirt slogans in the shaded ovals.
Business Model Generation (Alexander Osterwalder & Yves Pigneur)
For more details on the business model canvas, check out their homepage.
The Four Steps to the Epiphany (Steven Blank)
The gist of the book is that one should not expect to be able to create a business plan, execute it and then just watch the money roll in. Business planning - just like product development - is an iterative, incremental process. Another important point is that new business development is in many respects the opposite of standard operations of established companies. This point he summarizes nicely in this blog entry.
The main content of the book is a detailed description of the process of taking an idea from inception to a successful business. The focus of this process lies on frequent and intensive interaction with the customer, and to stress this point, he uses the term Customer Development in contrast to Product Development. The process is described through advice and interesting examples from Steve's impressive career. The advice ranges from the quite abstract to very detailed practical pointers. As such, the book gives a bit of a piecemeal impression. It's all probably really good advice, but it makes the reading experience a bit hard.
Quite early along in the book, I realized that the structure of the process actually reads as a mind map. To keep things clear in my mind, I started recreating the mind map on a piece of paper. This is what the first two chapters look like as a mind map. I would be curious to see if the book would be an easier read if it were presented as a browsable process description rather than a paper book.
What Steve presents works well with the agile software development mindset. Where agilists strive to get early and frequent feedback about the product, Steve strives to get early and frequent feedback on the business model. He even uses agile terminology, such as "The ability to embrace constant change" (p. 39).
For me, a programmer and product developer at heart, this book painted a colorful picture of the business side of the story. In the agile world, we have lofty ideals about satisfying the customer, but rarely do we give credit to the hard work that is done in locating and establishing interaction with the customers to be satisfied by our brilliant products. At the very least, "The Four Steps to the Epiphany" should help us understand that rarely is business life so easy that "they will come if we build it."