Serendipitous Collaboration in Unlikely Places

“Culture is a set of living relationships working toward a shared goal. It’s not something you are. It’s something you do.” ~ Daniel Coyle A little over a month ago I joined a shameless self-promotion channel in a Slack group to get notifications of colleague’s blog posts and occasionally share my own. I expected it to serve as a means of constraining the firehose of information to alert me about new things I cared about. It has achieved that goal, but has morphed into something well beyond that. ...

December 30, 2020 · 2 min · Skyler Lemay

High Notification Rates and Psychological Safety: Decreasing the Learning Curve

“The fascinating thing is, however, these awkward, painful interactions generate the highly cohesive, trusting behavior necessary for smooth cooperation.” ~ Daniel Coyle Last week my colleague, Mike Crittenden, wrote a post on how good teams are noisy. In it he discusses the concept of successful teams having high notification rates and tangible benefits he has observed. Interestingly enough, last week also brought a tangible example of how high notification rates and psychological safety can help reduce the learning curve. ...

December 22, 2020 · 4 min · Skyler Lemay

What Mistakes did you Make This Sprint?

It’s time for the Sprint Retrospective and people are submitting their thoughts on what went well and what to improve. As the team submits their ideas, the what to improve column remains minimal if populated at all. Are things going so well that there is nothing to improve? This seems statistically unlikely; how can we seek a more balanced retrospective? Before we can do anything we should first examine if the group has a shared sense of psychological safety. This is the foundation for healthy discussions within the group. Without it, the group is unlikely to engage in sharing obstacles to overcome for fear of retribution or appearing incompetent. A tell-tale sign that the group lacks psychological safety is if people are afraid to say they made a mistake. If your team is in this state, focus on building the team’s psychological safety first. ...

December 11, 2020 · 3 min · Skyler Lemay

The Importance of Creating Psychological Safety

“Words are noise. Group performance depends on behavior that communicates one powerful overarching idea: We are safe and connected.” ~ Daniel Coyle We’ve all probably experienced some truly amazing teams and some dreadful ones. What sets them apart? It isn’t pure happenstance or a roll of the dice. The foundation of healthy teams and cultures is a concept called Psychological Safety. While this concept has been picking up buzzword steam, it has been around since 1999. In her paper, Psychological Safety and Learning Behavior in Work Teams Amy Edmondson defined team psychological safety as “a shared belief held by members of a team that the team is safe for interpersonal risk taking”. Why is this so important and how can teams work to create it? ...

December 7, 2020 · 4 min · Skyler Lemay

Empower Teams with Sprint Goals

The Sprint Goal is a core tenet in Scrum, an agile development framework. According to the Scrum Guide, the sprint goal is the “single objective for the sprint….The Sprint Goal also creates coherence and focus, encouraging the Scrum Team to work together rather than on separate initiatives.” It is an artifact of the Sprint planning session and empowers the development team to prioritize and focus work. ...

November 25, 2020 · 2 min · Skyler Lemay