Lean vs Agile vs Design Thinking: What you really need to know to build high-performing digital product teams
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.63 (560 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1541140036 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 64 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2016-06-20 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
. About the Author JEFF GOTHELF is the author of Lean UX and Sense and Respond, as well as a speaker and organizational designer. Over his 20 years in technology Jeff has worked to bring a customer-centric, evidence-based approach to product strategy, design and leadership. Jeff is regularly keynoting conferences, teaching workshops or working directly with client leadership teams across North America, Europe & Asia. Jeff has worked in various roles and leadership positions, most recently as co-founder of Neo Innovation
Over his 20 years in technology Jeff has worked to bring a customer-centric, evidence-based approach to product strategy, design and leadership. Jeff is regularly keynoting conferences, teaching workshops or working directly with client leadership teams across North America, Europe & Asia. . JEFF GOTHELF is the author of Lean UX and Sense and Respond, as well as a speaker and organizational designer. Jeff has work
In the worst of cases, each discipline on these teams -- product management, design and software engineering -- learn a different model. As companies evolve to adopt, integrate and leverage software as the defining element of their success in the 21st century, a rash of processes and methodologies are vying for their product teams' attention. This short, tactical book reconciles the perceived differences in Lean Startup, Design Thinking and Agile software development by focusing not on rituals and practices but on the values that underpin all 3 methods.
Cuts through the jargon to provide clear, concise descriptions and a forwardpath that works. David W. Gray A refreshingly brief, no-nonsense, practical guide for leaders and practitioners who are struggling to implement new methodologies like lean, agile and design thinking. Gothelf cuts through the jargon and provides clear, concise descriptions of the main approaches and provides a path forward that blends and balances the best from each.. "Needs a bit more meat." according to Stephen Hawley. The overview of Lean, Agile, and Design Thinking methods was useful, but not quite enough for me. I especially wanted more from the section on Design Thinking as this area is the least familiar for me. In the end I expected more synthesis of these ideas and actionable strategies than I got.On the plus side, no pages were wasted and it is a quick and easy read.. Hits the highlights Kathi G. If you're questioning the design methods you're using, or find yourself wanting to use a little Agile, a little Lean, and a dash of Design Thinking This is a good summary of how the best of each might come together.