« Let the Experts Make the Decisions | Main | To Be or Not to Be Agile »
February 05, 2007 
Iteration 6 - Cleanup!
Well. Last iteration was great! I didn't document it, because it was trivial: I had one full day coaching engagement plus a two-day public course. And then the rest of the week I did nothing!!! What a joy! Anyway, now onto iteration 6 - cleaning up from the cancelled iteration and catching up from the vacation.
My plans this week are simple:
1. Training Follow-up: lots of admistrative details to take care of.
(7 Tasks)
2. Coaching Follow-up: some marketing and coaching things to help my client.
(3 Tasks)
3. Development Work for my Client
(6 Tasks)
4. Long-overdue Financial Stuff: getting papers in order, doing spreadsheets, etc.
(4 Tasks)
5. Reduce Email Inbox Backlog by 125 messages
(2 Tasks - this is an odd one which I'll talk about more in a moment)
6. Prepare Some Technical Training Materials
(1 Task - collect already existing materials into a single piece)
Reducing my email inbox is really about 125 tasks, but most of them will be very fast. From past experience, getting rid of 125 messages should take between 4 and 8 hours of concentrated work. We'll see!
I'm committing to 23 Tasks. This should be about right, although, (again!) it might be a bit of an over-commitment. The only reason that I think I might be okay here is that I am trying to include more of the stuff that I would be doing anyway but just not reporting on my Work Queue. The admin stuff in particular!
To be clear: the past few iterations I have learned about my capacity. This time, I am trying to be more visible. Usually, I do not put _everything_ on my Work Queue and in tasks. I leave out things that are small or that I am always doing. I'm going to try to become more honest about what I am doing, not just my capacity. We'll see how it goes!
Related articles can be found in the following categories:
Agile Case Studies
I also maintain a page of references and recommended links to materials related to agile methods.
Posted by Mishkin Berteig at February 5, 2007 12:27 PM


