Link Collection — March 18, 2012

  • Amazon.com: Real Business of IT: How CIOs Create and Communicate Value (9781422147610): Richard Hunter, George Westerman: Books

    Referencing in advice to client. Good book.

    tags: cio

  • Give it five minutes – (37signals)

    “Ideas are fragile. They often start powerless. They’re barely there, so easy to ignore or skip or miss.

    There are two things in this world that take no skill: 1. Spending other people’s money and 2. Dismissing an idea.

    Dismissing an idea is so easy because it doesn’t involve any work. You can scoff at it. You can ignore it. You can puff some smoke at it. That’s easy. The hard thing to do is protect it, think about it, let it marinate, explore it, riff on it, and try it. The right idea could start out life as the wrong idea.

    So next time you hear something, or someone, talk about an idea, pitch an idea, or suggest an idea, give it five minutes.”

    tags: ideas mentoring

  • Sunni Brown: Doodlers, unite! | Video on TED.com

    Doodler vindication!

    “Studies show that sketching and doodling improve our comprehension — and our creative thinking. So why do we still feel embarrassed when we’re caught doodling in a meeting? Sunni Brown says: Doodlers, unite! She makes the case for unlocking your brain via pad and pen.”

    tags: TED creativity doodling

  • Conway’s law – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    “Conway’s law is an adage named after computer programmer Melvin Conway, who introduced the idea in 1968:

    …organizations which design systems … are constrained to produce designs which are copies of the communication structures of these organizations.”

    tags: organization systems

  • How Sara Blakely of Spanx Turned $5,000 into $1 billion – Forbes.com

    Good self-made woman entrepreneur story: 

    “Sara Blakely is the youngest self-made woman to join this year’s billionaires’ club–turning $5,000 in savings into a new retail category”

    tags: forbes spanx

  • Self-tracking for health, fun and profit? – Input Output

    My latest on Active Information:

    “About a decade ago, I was working with my favorite co-conspirator on a universal task viewer service, which was an adjunct to our event-driven architecture. In order for something to appear in the task viewer, it had to be “trackable” (include the proper interface).
    Over the course of our design sessions, and throughout the next few months, we kept identifying business and system actions that should be trackable. It became apparent to us that nearly every business and system action could be trackable, following an interface pattern similar to making document objects printable.
    I hadn’t thought of “trackable” — and the running “hey that’s trackable” joke — in years. However, reading Counting Every Moment on self-tracking in the recent Economist Technology Quarterly bounced trackable up my memory stack.”

    tags: active-information self-tracking hpio

  • Kanban development oversimplified: a simple explanation of how Kanban adds to the ever-growing Agile toolkit

    Jump to Kanban in Lean manufacturing distilled section

    tags: kanban agile

  • Kanban is the New Scrum « The Hacker Chick Blog

    “The thing I’ve grown to dislike about Scrum are it’s time-boxed sprints.

    Working with startups, Scrum sprints are almost always way too long. When your sprints are too long then releases are infrequent (deferring revenue) and the team is forced to wait too long before being able to adapt to changing customer needs. This is wasteful because it means you’re continuing to move forward with outdated information.

    On the other hand, if sprints are too short, big features need to be arbitrarily chunked into smaller tasks, which aren’t useful to the customer on their own & can obfuscate what the team is trying to achieve”

    tags: agile scrum kanban

  • 10 Tips on Writing from David Ogilvy | Brain Pickings

    “People who think well, write well.”

    tags: writing ogilvy

  • Why I Am Leaving Goldman Sachs – NYTimes.com

    “It astounds me how little senior management gets a basic truth: If clients don’t trust you they will eventually stop doing business with you. It doesn’t matter how smart you are.”

    tags: nytimes goldman leadership

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Related posts:

  1. Link Collection — March 4, 2012
  2. Link Collection — January 29, 2012
  3. Link Collection — February 5, 2012

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Architecture Capabilities through Business Models

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Expanding the Envelope of BPM

Organizational leaders face difficult decisions when it comes to balancing change against ROI expectations. Does change justify the cost in terms of time, money and resources? At the end of the day, executives are looking solutions that can help them create and sustain an agile business while minimizing waste. Over the years organizations have achieved […]

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