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People
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Importance of People Most important factor in the quality of software is the quality of the programmers If your life depended on a particular piece of software, what would you want to know about it? That the person who wrote it was “both highly intelligent and possessed by an extremely rigorous, almost fanatical desire to make their program work the way it should.” Terry Bollinger (2001)
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Peopleware DeMarco and Lister
People are primary Goal-driven human processes are self-healing Rule-driven processes are fragile Public communication Space Cave and Commons Stewart Brand, How Buildings Learn
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FUNDAMENTAL CONFLICTS
Knowledge Workers … FUNDAMENTAL CONFLICTS prefer closed offices but communicate better in open ones congregate in particular geographical areas move around in the course of their work collaborate concentrate work in the office communicate with people who are close by don't care about facilities gewgaws Davenport, Why Office Design Matters 2005
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Tuckman Team Stages Forming - polite but untrusting
Storming - testing others Norming - valuing other types Performing - flexibility from trust Adjourning - disengagement Tuckman, Bruce. (1965). Developmental sequence in small groups. Psychological bulletin, 63,
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People are different
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Differences Work Styles Work Approach Skills Personality
Conflict Resolution Time Management
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Work Styles Work with Others Necessary Work with Others Preferred
Self-Motivated Works Better Alone Time of Day Need Large Dedicated Chunks of Time More Effective if Thinking about and Doing Work in Background
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Work Approach Spend a lot of time before do anything
Produce linearly with regular visible progress Big push at the front; harder to keep going
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Skills Big picture Understanding clients Design Documentation Detail
Interpreting others Testing Budgeting/scheduling
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Personality Acceptance of challenge Acceptance of criticism
Feelings easily hurt Humor effective Needs direct talk PC Sensitivity Need for recognition Confrontation Conciliation Non-social
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Styles in Conflict Resolution
Collaborator Works to find a solution that satisfies all concerns Accommodator Neglects own concerns to satisfy others Compromiser Tries to satisfy others without giving up own concerns Competitor Pursues own concerns at other’s expense Avoider Evades the situation and never addresses
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What works
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Good Team Member Core Competency: problem-solving ability
Personal Attributes Openness Supportiveness Action orientation Positive personal style
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Positive Team Relationships
Constructive for all team members Productive brings out the best thinking in all team members Mutual Understanding seeking to understand others’ perspectives Self Correcting
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Effective Team Problem Solving
Focus clear about what you are doing Climate positive inclusive focus on the issue…not the person Open Communication Issues identified, discussed, prioritized and acted on
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Eight Characteristics of a Great Team
Clear, elevating goal Results-driven structure Competent members Unified commitment Collaborative climate Standards of excellence External support & recognition Principled leadership
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trust but verify
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Trust doesn’t mean Ignore
Don’t micromanage Keep people excited and involved Verify that nothing got lost or misunderstood
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Why? Different strengths and weaknesses History drives decisions
You don’t know what you don’t know Words have different meanings and interpretations
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leadership
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Everyone Should be a Leader
Know when to lead and when to follow Recognition critical What is most effective?
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exercise
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Team Turmoil: Forming You are on an 8-person team that has been given the job to complete a web application for a non-profit. They have a major event coming up and need to organize a vast number of volunteers. The team are all members of the organization with computer skills who have volunteered to do the work. The organizers have set up a meeting for you and explained the requirements. It’s now time to get started. What do you do?
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Team Turmoil: Storming
Finley has committed to get the database up before the next meeting and did but the design was not what the team had agreed on. Now what? Peyton and Kerry were supposed to be working together. The team discovers that Peyton did all of the work but they presented it as if it were done jointly. Should the team call out Kerry? Mentor Peyton? Reese keeps taking the jobs that no one else wants. It is clear that Reese is not enjoying this role but keeps agreeing, if not volunteering for the tasks. There is a concern that Reese is going to burn out. What should the team do?
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Additional source
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Larson and LaFasto Teamwork: What Must Go Right/What Can Go Wrong
When Teams Work Best Accumulated information from 600 teams
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