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> So, the PMO can help motivating, but it is the Scrum Masters and Product Owner responsability to be really
> close to the team and the ones who are going to motivate and get high performance teams.
I'm going to take your idea even further and assert that *no one* can motivate developers to do complex work. The Product Owner can provide an inspiring vision and the ScrumMaster can help remove demotivating impediments (such as a PMO who is trying to pressure -- I mean "motivate" -- them).
I do not hear developers reporting the PMO as a source of motivation. More often the PMO is described as an impediment. The PMOs I meet don't report great job satisfaction either. The role they've been asked to perform is inherently dysfunctional, rooted in the previous century's discredited models of human effectiveness. The last thing Taylorism was good for was building 9 million Model-T Fords. But Scrum is for creative work, building one of something that's never existed before.
This isn't to say the individuals saddled with dysfunctional management job titles don't have anything to offer the Agile organization. Most do. (A few others should be paid to stay home and out of the way.) People who are serious about team self organization are working to reduce the influence of job titles and static hierarchies, to the point of eliminating them.
--mj
Actually they don't have any responsibility other than mentoring themselves to some other place. May be some smart senior managers can help scrum masters to facilitate scrum of scrums and improving the process.
Are PMOs useful?
In my opinion, they can be useful (to some extent), as long as the team is good...
On Jan 4, 2012, at 9:35 AM, Gustavo Cebrian Garcia wrote:Are PMOs useful?They can be, I imagine. I've never seen it happen, but I've only been doing this for a half century.In my opinion, they can be useful (to some extent), as long as the team is good...If the team is good, what good is the PMO?
www.XProgramming.com
Ron JeffriesBefore you contradict an old man, my fair friend, you should endeavor to understand him. - George Santayana
Are PMOs useful?They can be, I imagine. I've never seen it happen, but I've only been doing this for a half century.
Pierre E. NEIS, csp
PMO @ coPROcess S.A. │ Scrum & Lean Coach
M: +352 / 661 727 867 - Skype: pierre.neis
Meet with me: http://meetwith.me/pierreneis
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Pierre E. NEIS, csp
PMO @ coPROcess S.A. │ Scrum & Lean Coach
M: +352 / 661 727 867 - Skype: pierre.neis
Meet with me: http://meetwith.me/pierreneis
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Pierre E. NEIS, csp
PMO @ coPROcess S.A. │ Scrum & Lean Coach
M: +352 / 661 727 867 - Skype: pierre.neis
Meet with me: http://meetwith.me/pierreneis
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Pierre phrases it
> Here a new changing paradigm: People are values instead costs.
I've coached that "people are capital assets" -- often they are treated as "production assets".
It is the same thought that Pierre has -- use whichever thought works best in your environment.
Capital == longlasting value to be used, nurtured and reused. Production == expensed resource to be bought-at-value, consumed and replaced.
- Skip
Pierre E. NEIS, csp
PMO @ coPROcess S.A. │ Scrum & Lean Coach
M: +352 / 661 727 867 - Skype: pierre.neis
Meet with me: http://meetwith.me/pierreneis
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Yves asks:
> what is the response you get when you coach this?
Good question -- I get complete agreement from the individuals and their line managers.
The higher up the "business chain" I go, the more factors such as "today's skill-set" and other questions about relevancy to <current> (their words) situation.
My take ... the less enlightened, the more an organization works in "today's" short-term needs. The more enlightened, they work in the "industry" needs and skill-sets.
The mindset that you and I share is one of a longer-term resource. If you only need a "widget" for today-only, it doesn't make sense to hire or retain a "widget-plus". But those situations are few.
My experience is only one -- there are many in this forum who have far more experience than I do.
- Skip
Phone 00 32 476 43 38 32
Blog: www.Hanoulle.be
Agile Games: http://www.AgileGames.org
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Yves asks:
> what is the response you get when you coach this?
Good question -- I get complete agreement from the individuals and their line managers.
The higher up the "business chain" I go, the more factors such as "today's skill-set" and other questions about relevancy to <current> (their words) situation.
My take ... the less enlightened, the more an organization works in "today's" short-term needs. The more enlightened, they work in the "industry" needs and skill-sets.
The mindset that you and I share is one of a longer-term resource.
Pierre E. NEIS, csp
PMO @ coPROcess S.A. │ Scrum & Lean Coach
M: +352 / 661 727 867 - Skype: pierre.neis
Meet with me: http://meetwith.me/pierreneis
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I think your vision of a PMO is too low-level. You might find Johanna
Rothman's book on Portfolio Management (http://amzn.to/xZEtv6) helpful.
- George
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* George Dinwiddie * http://blog.gdinwiddie.com
Software Development http://www.idiacomputing.com
Consultant and Coach http://www.agilemaryland.org
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* George Dinwiddie * http://blog.gdinwiddie.com
Software Development http://www.idiacomputing.com
Consultant and Coach http://www.agilemaryland.org
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On 1/6/12 4:20 PM, Gustavo Cebrian Garcia wrote:
> Hello George,
>
> We are talking about the role of a PMO here.
To me, PMO means Portfolio Management Office. Some call it Project
Management Office but are really talking about the portfolio of projects.
What does it mean to you?
- George
Pierre E. NEIS, csp
Senior Operational Excellence Consultant @ coPROcess S.A. │ Scrum/Lean Coach
M: +352 / 661 727 867 - Skype: pierre.neis
Meet with me: http://meetwith.me/pierreneis
Owner of The "Product Owner's Help Desk"
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If a PMO says that XP and TDD are not fitted to Infrastructure and/or Enterprise Projects, then it makes sense to have one.
Pierre E. NEIS, csp
Senior Operational Excellence Consultant @ coPROcess S.A. │ Scrum/Lean Coach
M: +352 / 661 727 867 - Skype: pierre.neis
Meet with me: http://meetwith.me/pierreneis
Owner of The "Product Owner's Help Desk"