Management by Walking Around | Glossary

Definition: 

Management by Walking Around (MBMA) referee to a style of business management which involves manages wandering around, in an unstructured manner, through the workplace at random to check with employees on the status of ongoing work. The origin of the term has been traced to executives at the company Hewlett Packard for management practices in the 1970s.

The emphasis is on the word walking as an unplanned visit, when employees are not expecting a visit from managers at a more systematic, pre-approved scheduled time. The expected benefit is that by random sampling of event or employees discussions, is more likely to facilitate improvements to the morale, sense of organisational purpose, productivity and total quality management.

Further Reading:
Book: SUCCEEDING WITH AGILE Software Development Using Scrum by Mike Cohn

Comparative Agility Assessments | Glossary

Definition: 

Clients, Management other stakeholders need to know “How are they doing?”. A business does not need to be perfect, it needs to be better than its competitor, stay ahead of them.  Organisations are not striving for perfection against some idealised list of agile principles and practices, they are trying to be more agile than their competitors. Becoming agile itself is not a goal, producing better products than the competition remains the goal.  Being more agile than one’s competitors indicates organisations ability to deliver better products more quickly and cheaply.

Kenny Rubin and Mike created the Comparative Agility assessment, where  assessment can be based on individual responses to survey questions. Survey responses for the organisation are aggregated and compared against entire database of assessments. This approach assesses on seven dimensions: teamwork, requirements, planning, technical practices, quality, culture and knowledge creation. A comparative nature of the assessment was intended to be its biggest strength, seeing how your organisation compares with other other organisation improvement efforts can be focused on the most promising areas.

Further Reading:
Book: SUCCEEDING WITH AGILE Software Development Using Scrum by Mike Cohn