Definitely, Maybe Agile Podcast Por Peter Maddison and Dave Sharrock arte de portada

Definitely, Maybe Agile

Definitely, Maybe Agile

De: Peter Maddison and Dave Sharrock
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Adopting new ways of working like Agile and DevOps often falters further up the organization. Even in smaller organizations, it can be hard to get right. In this podcast, we are discussing the art and science of definitely, maybe achieving business agility in your organization.© 2025 Definitely, Maybe Agile Economía Gestión Gestión y Liderazgo
Episodios
  • From Vision to Execution with Mark Reich
    May 22 2025

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    Why do so many organizational strategies end up as posters on walls rather than driving real change? In this episode, Dave and Peter dive deep with Mark Reich, who spent 23 years at Toyota before joining the Lean Enterprise Institute, to examine how Toyota's legendary Hoshin Kanri system transforms strategic thinking into coordinated action.

    This week´s takeaways:

    • Systems Over Silos: Toyota's integrated management system creates both vertical alignment (connecting corporate objectives to frontline work) and horizontal alignment (ensuring cross-functional collaboration).
    • Value-Creating Managers: Middle management layers should be redefined as value creators and people developers rather than eliminated or reduced.
    • Improvement at the Gemba: Real progress happens by focusing improvements at the "gemba" (where work actually happens) with leadership's primary role being to remove burdens from frontline workers.

    Mark explains the fundamental difference between most companies' approach to strategy and Toyota's integrated management system. Unlike conventional top-down cascading goals, Hoshin Kanri creates alignment throughout the organization. The discussion explores practical aspects of strategy execution: separating strategic initiatives from daily management, structuring cross-departmental collaboration, and developing people at all levels. Whether you're struggling with siloed departments, disconnected leadership, or strategies that never fully materialize, this episode offers a blueprint for creating systems that align vision with execution while developing organizational capability.


    Resources:

    • The Machine That Changed the World - by James P. Womack- https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/93903.The_Machine_That_Changed_the_World_
    • Managing Our Purpose - by Mark Reich- https://www.lean.org/store/book/managing-on-purpose/
    • Our Least Important Asset - by Peter Capelli- https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/75492283-our-least-important-asset?from_search=true&from_srp=true&qid=IGIsI50s8q&rank=1
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    34 m
  • Flow States in Remote Teams with Steven Puri
    May 15 2025

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    In this episode of Definitely, Maybe Agile, hosts Peter Maddison and David Sharrock welcome Steven Puri, Founder and CEO of The Sukha Company. Drawing from his unique background spanning Hollywood film production and tech startups, Steven shares fascinating insights about achieving flow states in remote and hybrid work environments.


    Steven's journey from IBM software engineer to Hollywood executive (where he helped manage franchises like Die Hard and Wolverine at studios including DreamWorks and 20th Century Fox) provides a refreshing perspective on team productivity and creative collaboration. He explains how the film industry has long mastered the transitions between remote, hybrid, and in-person work—knowledge that proved invaluable when the pandemic forced tech teams into distributed environments.


    The conversation explores the neuroscience of creativity, practical leadership approaches to foster flow states, and how Steven's experiences led him to create a platform specifically designed to help remote workers overcome procrastination while maintaining wellbeing. This is one not to miss!

    Key Takeaways:

    • Leaders can create environments where flow happens - Establishing boundaries like protected focus time (e.g., 9 AM to noon) allows team members to accomplish meaningful work before daily meetings begin.
    • The "two-problem" approach to creativity - Having more than one challenge to work on simultaneously can unlock creative solutions, as your subconscious mind works on one problem while you actively engage with another.
    • Remote work requires different "colors on your palette" - Different work modes (remote, hybrid, in-office) excel at different tasks, with in-person collaboration being particularly valuable for creative ideation and whiteboarding sessions.

    Books Mentioned:

    • "Flow" by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi - https://www.goodreads.com/es/book/show/66354.Flow
    • "The Net and the Butterfly" by Olivia Fox - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30024684-the-net-and-the-butterfly
    • "Atomic Habits" by James Clear - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/40121378-atomic-habits
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    38 m
  • The Hidden Cost of Temporary Fixes
    May 8 2025

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    Every technical system harbors its share of quick fixes and band-aids – those temporary solutions we implement with the best intentions of returning to fix properly "someday." But what happens when that day never comes?


    Peter Madison and David Sharrock dive deep into what they call "longstanding risks" – the accumulated technical debt that results from prioritizing expediency over completeness. Through a relatable example of a memory-leaking service that gets automatically restarted rather than properly fixed, they unpack the hidden costs of these decisions. The conversation reveals how seemingly minor shortcuts can gradually transform robust systems into fragile, unmaintainable messes.


    The hosts share a compelling analogy about a utility company that saved money by skipping tree trimming around power lines for just one year – only to face significantly higher costs from the resulting infrastructure damage. This perfectly illustrates how short-term thinking about technical maintenance creates expensive long-term consequences. They offer practical recommendations including proper documentation of temporary fixes, avoiding team overload, and maintaining good system hygiene.


    What makes this episode particularly valuable is the mindset shift it advocates: moving from attempting to prevent all possible failures to building systems that remain resilient when inevitable problems occur. As Sharrock references from safety expert Sidney Decker's work, sometimes the best approach is focusing on what makes your system work well rather than obsessively eliminating every risk. Whether you're managing complex technical systems or leading transformation efforts, these insights will help you balance pragmatic solutions with long-term system health.



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    17 m
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