Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

Agile in the Enterprise

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009 by cindyedmonds

There is an exciting shift in the Project Management world from focussing on teams to moving our attention to the Enterprise. I am very excited about this because over time as a Project Manager you realise that you can arm yourself with skills, knowledge, certification and techniques and you can lead your teams and equip them with knowledge and freedom to work in a focussed and directed way and still hit obstacles that invariably lead back to the organisation. Both Prince2 and Agile practitioners are starting to think about how to address the organisational issues and how to scale methodologies to the enterprise.

Last week at Valtech’s Agile Edge conference Al Goerner gave a terrific key note session on Adapting Agile to the Enterprise. In explaining the maturing of Agile practice he outlined the two generations of Agile:

1st Generation - Agile for the team

  • Emphasising the Human Factors in development
  • Emphasising Empowerment-to-a-goal
  • A Gaggle of Gurus
  • Naive Agile and Faux Agile

2nd Generation - Agile for the Enterprise

  • Emphasising Risk Management
  • Emphasising Backlog Management
  • Emphasising Visibility and Accountability
  • Emphasising the Whole Solution Value Stream

The 2nd Generation of Agile practices really resonates with me and I’m sure resonates with any Project Manager who has worked in large organisations. How many of us have wrangled with the 1st Generation ‘Gaggle of Gurus’? :-) I certainly have!

Managing risk and providing visibility and accountability is so important in the enterprise and I’m completely inspired by Al Goerner’s presentation on exactly these issues. His most important point was that Agile doesn’t mean not focussing on these things and it doesn’t mean not producing documentation and certain other claims made by the 1st Generation-ers. The key thing is to only do things that have a point, that will be read, and not just as a formality or because they’re ‘required’.

Beam me up Scotty!

MediaGuardian Edinburgh International Television Festival 2009

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009 by cindyedmonds

On Friday 28th August the Magic Milestones team journeyed to Edinburgh for the International Television Festival to immerse ourselves in the current thoughts and activities of the broadcast media sector. The festival consisted of two and a half days of sessions on many topics from digitizing archives, to David Simon talking about The Wire, to the James Murdoch’s MacTaggart lecture to a debate on TV and Politics and the end of the ’spin cycle’.

I’m sure each Magic Milestones team member had their own Festival highlight but for me it was hearing David Simon discuss the creative process that produced The Wire as he stressed that none of the writers involved were ‘from television’ which has ultimately lead to the creation of the second best drama series on TV (I think The Sopranos pips it to the post but it’s still excellent) and then contrasting Simon’s sentiments about the societal results of free market capitalism with James Murdoch’s lecture which posited the opposite view - that ‘the only reliable, durable, and perpetual guarantor of independence is profit.’ The contrast between the two positions was also mentioned by Dominic West when he accepted an award for The Wire at the Channel of the Year award on Saturday night. The awards were hosted by Michael Macintyre who was hilarious and it’s hard to not laugh with someone who manages to find everything funny and introduced some welcome levity to the Festival. He also just looks funny :-)

Heather Brook at the Edinburgh Television Festival

Heather Brook at the Edinburgh Television Festival

Conversations about the BBC’s dominance in the UK broadcast media space and its impact and potential top-slicing plans featured strongly throughout the Festival which detracted a little from its ‘International’ title as the licence fee funding model is a strictly local issue - if such a thing can exist in our online media age. I have to mention the funding issue as it really did dominate conversations but the more interesting topic to our MM group was the changing platform of media - archiving and the complicated rights model, TV on demand and audience behaviour/expectation. The media industry is at the cusp of where other industries like banking found itself 10 years ago (and this is not a comment on the economy for a change!). Technological innovations weren’t, and aren’t, imposed upon ‘the masses’ but come from within ‘the masses’ in most cases. Ie., no-one sold ‘the internet’ to people. Users needed to be able to bank online and communicate with their banks, colleagues, friends, and schools etc. electronically and businesses adapted their practices and developed the applications that allowed the users to do that. The same thing is happening with media and users want to be able to watch TV on demand, listen live and catch up with programmes that they missed. The ability to do these things and the technology to enable it is not new (iPlayer has been released for 18 months and set top boxes were being developed at least 10 years ago (probably longer, I’m not an expert but that’s when they came to my attention in my day-to-day life) but the business model for the broadcast media is at the point where it’s desperately trying to catch up. The platform for consuming media is changing fast and the business practices of rights management and pay walls are still being thrashed out.

The digital revolution of media is also discussed (with a lot more passion) on this blog http://simsblog.typepad.com/simsblog/2009/09/top-10-lies-newspaper-execs-are-telling-themselves.html which is interesting for its tech-driven view. I don’t agree with all of the thoughts expressed, such as ‘I believe that a large percentage of online readers are content to read someone else’s analysis of the news rather than the news itself’ but it’s an interesting read for a techno viewpoint (I should probably disagree in the comments on the blog itself but I’m a bit scared by its angry tone! They might savage me and neither side of the debate is really dealing in facts, just opinion it would seem, so I’m staying at a distance :-S)

The philosophical concepts of scarcity and quality and economics of broadcast media are being debated alongside the rapidly changing methods of consumption and audience expectation and it was quite exciting to be party to the debates at Edinburgh this year.

Magic Milestones reaches the final of the National Business Awards

Monday, July 27th, 2009 by eliteva78

Magic Milestones have recently received a letter from the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award congratulating us on reaching the finals of the National Business Awards (Midlands, Wales and East Anglia).

In addition, Stephanie Chamberlain has been invited as a VIP guest to St James’ Palace for the gold award presentation!

Stephanie Chamberlain Regional Finalist in National Business Awards

Thursday, May 14th, 2009 by Nici

NBA2009_Finalist_Logo_Regional

More exciting news has just arrived at Magic Milestones - our very own Managing Director Steph is a regional finalist at the National Business Awards!

Steph faces 6 other finalists in The Entrepreneur of The Year Award for the Wales, Midlands and East Anglia region.

She’s currently preparing hard for a gruelling day of presenting to the judges before they announce their final decision at the awards ceremony on the 16th July.

If Steph wins, she’ll be entered into the National Awards, when judges select an overall winner from each of the regional winners. Take a look at the list of finalists and other details.

Congratulations Steph and the best of luck for all your upcoming award ceremonies!

Magic Milestones Delivers 5 More BBC Sites

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009 by Nici

bbc-mundo-portada22

The Magic Milestones team at the BBC have been working hard over the last few months alongside World Service Future Media to re-launch 12 of their language sites in 1024 format and in a new, improved Content Management System.

Following on from the launches of BBCPersian.com and BBCBrasil.com, the team have had a launch-crazy last 6 weeks, launching 5 more sites.

BBCVietnamese.com, BBCUrdu.com, BBCWorldService.com, BBCMundo.com and BBCRussian.com were all project managed by members of the Magic Milestones team, and were all run according to Agile Methodology.

The sites are mainly news sites focusing on getting cutting edge journalism to all over the world, with the exception of BBCWorldService.com which is a support site for the extensive World Service radio network.

The intensity of the project put many demands on the team, and it’s a testament to their dedication and hard work that the sites look fabulous and that they managed to keep up the pace during this busy time.

Of course the hard work doesn’t stop here, and all involved have quickly moved on to working on the next wave of language sites to go 1024. Watch this space…