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445: Working Iteratively
Manage episode 447374568 series 2548082
Does having smaller, more frequent iterations help to ease your cognitive load? During this episode, we discuss the benefits and challenges of working iteratively and whether or not it can prevent costly errors. You’ll hear about juggling individual pieces effectively, factors that incentivize and de-incentivize working iteratively, and how Joël gauges whether or not a project should be broken up into smaller tasks. It can be hard to adopt small iterations, and this conversation also touches on the idea of ‘good enough code’ and discusses how agility can reduce the cost of making changes. Tuning in, you’ll hear about some of the challenges of keeping up with changes as they evolve and why it is beneficial to do so. You will also be equipped with a thought experiment involving elephant carpaccio to build your understanding of working iteratively, explore the challenge of keeping up with evolving changes, and more. Thanks for listening.
Key Points From This Episode:
Stephanie shares a recent mishap that happened at work and what she learned from it.
Unpacking pressures and other aspects that may have contributed to the error.
Joël’s recent travels and his fresh appreciation for fall.
The cost of an incident occurring, how this increases, and the role of code review.
Benefits and pitfalls of more regular code review.
Why working with smaller chunks of work is helpful for Joël’s focus.
Juggling individual pieces effectively.
Factors that de-incentivize working iteratively such as waiting on 24-hour quality control processes.
How working iteratively can facilitate better communication.
Why Joël feels that work that spans a few days should be broken up into smaller chunks.
The idea of ‘good enough code’.
How agility can reduce the cost of making changes.
Using the elephant carpaccio exercise to bolster your understanding of working iteratively.
The challenge of keeping up with changes as they evolve and why it is beneficial to do so.
Involvement from the team and the capacity to change course.
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Working Incrementally
Working Iteratively
Elephant Carpaccio Exercise
The Bike Shed
Joël Quenneville on LinkedIn
Joël Quenneville on X
Support The Bike Shed
446 episoder
Manage episode 447374568 series 2548082
Does having smaller, more frequent iterations help to ease your cognitive load? During this episode, we discuss the benefits and challenges of working iteratively and whether or not it can prevent costly errors. You’ll hear about juggling individual pieces effectively, factors that incentivize and de-incentivize working iteratively, and how Joël gauges whether or not a project should be broken up into smaller tasks. It can be hard to adopt small iterations, and this conversation also touches on the idea of ‘good enough code’ and discusses how agility can reduce the cost of making changes. Tuning in, you’ll hear about some of the challenges of keeping up with changes as they evolve and why it is beneficial to do so. You will also be equipped with a thought experiment involving elephant carpaccio to build your understanding of working iteratively, explore the challenge of keeping up with evolving changes, and more. Thanks for listening.
Key Points From This Episode:
Stephanie shares a recent mishap that happened at work and what she learned from it.
Unpacking pressures and other aspects that may have contributed to the error.
Joël’s recent travels and his fresh appreciation for fall.
The cost of an incident occurring, how this increases, and the role of code review.
Benefits and pitfalls of more regular code review.
Why working with smaller chunks of work is helpful for Joël’s focus.
Juggling individual pieces effectively.
Factors that de-incentivize working iteratively such as waiting on 24-hour quality control processes.
How working iteratively can facilitate better communication.
Why Joël feels that work that spans a few days should be broken up into smaller chunks.
The idea of ‘good enough code’.
How agility can reduce the cost of making changes.
Using the elephant carpaccio exercise to bolster your understanding of working iteratively.
The challenge of keeping up with changes as they evolve and why it is beneficial to do so.
Involvement from the team and the capacity to change course.
Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode:
Working Incrementally
Working Iteratively
Elephant Carpaccio Exercise
The Bike Shed
Joël Quenneville on LinkedIn
Joël Quenneville on X
Support The Bike Shed
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