The 5th event of the future mobility camp series took place this Friday. A welcome occasion for networking with the regional experts from industry partners, universities and public projects. Needless to say that it was a great chance to meet my former car2go and moovel colleagues as well.

After being hosted in Berlin and Dresden, the Future Mobility Camp was the first time in Stuttgart. Head of the initiative and organizer Martin Randelhoff kicked off with a fish-bowl setup. Stephan Rammler (Transportation Design & Social Sciences at Institute of Transportation Design Braunschweig) joined him, initiating a vivid session on future mobility aspects and influences.

The opening was followed by sessions from and with audience – 15 talks or presentations in 4 tracks. I would have loved a little more level of detail or the continued momentum from the introduction talk in there. Nevertheless, great networking and something I’m looking forward to visit next time in Dresden or Berlin.

You find a sketch note of that first part attached to this post.

Check out the web site for the next dates: Future Mobility Camp!

Scrum Intro für Neue Teammitglieder

Anfang des Jahres haben wir mit Uta Kapp eine Einführung in Scrum für neue Teammitglieder durchgeführt. Für uns wichtig war in dem Termin vor allem, wie wir die klassisch Projektmanagement- und Produktmanagement Denkenden in das agile Entwicklungsumfeld integrieren können. Meine Sketchnotes aus der Session findest Du hier:

Thanks to Lars for pointing me to this article. It’s a great insight on managing large teams over different locations efficiently. In his November 2012 article, Henrik Kniberg (also see my recent post from him introducing scrum) describes a team setup that combines scrum teams and keeps them interacting with each other.

It’s a challenge I’m currently facing as well setting up the new car2go and moovel development teams. I’ll definitely learn from that input for my further steps!

https://blog.crisp.se/2012/11/14/henrikkniberg/scaling-agile-at-spotify

Agile Product Ownership

Agile Product Ownership

With his 15 minute animated presentation, Henrik Kniberg describes the building blocks of agile product development really nicely.

It all sounds so simple. And actually, it is (while it actually isn’t). To my experience, one key fact for success to agile is achieving a high degree of transparency. No one wants to hear a “no” when asking for a feature. But constituting a “no” with a good reason, like an even better feature, will keep your stakeholders happy.

What do you find hard and how do you address these challenges?

Read Henrik Kniberg’s full article

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