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	<title>You Can be Great If You Really Want To &#187; talk</title>
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		<title>The Role of Leadership in Software Development</title>
		<link>http://kevinbauer.net/4649/the-role-of-leadership-in-software-development-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Mar 2010 11:09:55 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Leadership Development]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Google Tech Talks May 6, 2008 ABSTRACT When you look around, there are a lot of leaders recommended for software development. We have the functional manager and the project manager, the scrum master and the black belt, the product owner and the customer-on-site, the technical leader and the architect, the product manager and the chief [...]]]></description>
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<p>Google Tech Talks May 6, 2008 ABSTRACT When you look around, there are a lot of leaders recommended for software development. We have the functional manager and the project manager, the scrum master and the black belt, the product owner and the customer-on-site, the technical leader and the architect, the product manager and the chief engineer. Clearly that&#8217;s too many leaders. So how many leaders should there be, what should they do, what shouldn&#8217;t they do, and what skills do they need? This will be a presentation and discussion of leadership roles in software development &#8212; what works, what doesn&#8217;t and why. Speaker: Mary Poppendieck Mary Poppendieck started her career as a process control programmer, moved on to manage the IT department of a manufacturing plant, and then ended up in product development, where she was both a product champion and department manager. Mary considered retirement 1998, but instead found herself managing a government software project where she first encountered the word &#8220;waterfall.&#8221; When Mary compared her experience in successful software and product development to the prevailing opinions about how to manage software projects, she decided the time had come for a new paradigm. She wrote the award-winning book Lean Software Development: An Agile Toolkit in 2003 to explain how the lean principles from manufacturing offer a better approach to software development. Over the past six years, Mary has found retirement elusive as she lectures and <b>&#8230;</b><!-- pingbacker_start --><br />
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