Silicon Valley Code Camp : October 7 & 8, 2017

Andrew Webster

WCS (Wisdom at Work)
About Andrew
Andrew Webster is an agile mage. More properly, he’s an enterprise, team, and personal transformation coach and trainer, but who needs a job title that long? Andrew has worked in software development for 20 years; an agilist since 2004, certified as CSM, CSPO, and CSP, a certified NLP Master Practitioner, certified Training From The Back Of The Room trainer’s trainer, certified (but lousy) graphic facilitator, and certified Drexler/Sibbet Team Performance Indicator facilitator. So, he’s thoroughly proven to be certifiable. Previously working for giant clients like BBVA Compass, Visa, PayPal and Google subsidiary Nest, with over eighty projects under his belt.
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Speaking Sessions

  • Agile Appetizer

    9:00 AM Sunday   Room: Town Square C

    Ever met a resistant team? Or managers who say “Agile doesn’t work.” Or executives who think that agile is some kind of get-to-market-quick magic? Well, consider they have no actual idea what agile is. Why would they if no-one has ever explained it to them properly? Worse, their misunderstanding serves as their context during training and coaching and never getting any benefit, preventing successful agile transformations. Andrew Webster calls it “Agile PTSD.”

    In this session, you’ll get a deeper insight into the wisdom of agile practices, learning how to shift people’s context for agile development so they see it as a huge exciting opportunity instead of another thing they’ve got to handle when they’re already way too busy.

    We’ll cover a set of “dimensions” that explain:
    Takeaways
    •    Why agile practices are inevitable
    •    Why up to 70% of people hate their work and how agile practices can transform that
    •    How a company benefits financially from using agile approaches
    •    How to make sense of work and thereby improve the product, the process, and workers’ experience
    •    And more!
    We know agile development is "the difference maker." Now let’s make that difference!