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B**E
A Retrospective
Encountering such an ambitious title as "Lean vs. Agile vs. Design Thinking", I'll readily admit that I brought a bit of my own baggage with me when I started reading it. I've worked in variations of all three disciplines in several enterprises and continue to incorporate all three into my work as a consultant today. Like the author, I have some opinions formed both by scars and successes, and was eager to read his take on it and compare it with my own.The introduction of the book draws from one of Jeff's own consulting experiences to map Lean to Product Managers, Agile to Tech/Engineers, and Design Thinking to Designers, illustrating how even the correct practice of each can pull an overall body of work in different directions. This set off a bit of a red flag for me because when I held the title "Digital Product Manager", my job was to do Design Thinking (more so than Lean), to develop ever-so-valuable Customer Empathy into Agile Stories. However, the mapping of the roles to disciplines works well for the purposes of this book.When approaching a business book I think it's important to ask, "who is this written for?" - My takeaway is that it's for the individual manager, or influential stakeholder on a team, who is likely already "doing Agile" and may be invovled with, or wondering about, Lean and/or Design Thinking. It isn't going to help someone looking to get started fresh with one or more of these discilines as much as it will someone who is already in the thick of it. That said, there's a lot of wisdom presented that anyone starting out on a - what's the most current buzzword? - Digital Transformation Journey, would be wise to heed.As I started reading this book I imagined two directions it could go in, and I'll share the one that it didn't in case that's what you're looking for. The book does not try to define a process-driven approach of using the three disciplines and their component best practice methodologies with swim-lanes and flows that merge the inputs and outputs together and voila, great product and happy customers! This book takes an approach that will no doubt appeal to a broader audience: how does one synthesize the best things from the three disciplines and incorporate them into the workflow that can best be applied to their own practice?I really enjoyed the concise, easily consumable format of the book. The timing of reading it right before the 2017 holidays is perfect too. This is the perfect kind of book to share with your colleagues and use to spark discussion about how to make the change you want to see in how you approach your work. I'm going to place another order for several copies to give away to clients and team members that I know will benefit from Jeff's wisdom - and selfishly our collective working interactions will be improved. After all, that's the point of a good retrospective, right?
P**M
Four Stars
Very very short book
L**A
Good for understanding
This book helped me to understand the differences between the three disciplines, as well as why certain problems continue to arise when trying to work with groups who use a different method. I do wish there was more substance as to how they might come together, maybe even use some actual product/project examples? Definitely worth the read. It took less than 30 minutes to do so.
T**H
Must know for teams, short and to the point!
Great primer explaining the pain and chaos between UX, PM, and developers. Must read for teams.Everyone complaining about length versus content (12$) really missed the boat, and the point… 😂 Buy another thick O’reilly book you won’t read to set on your shelf at work. This is t going to teach you all 3… yes it’s an article, and article you can physically hand someone.
B**R
This should have been a blog post
There isn't enough information in this to justify its existence. It's a very short overview of those 3 methodologies and nothing about how to work with them. It's good for people who know nothing about product design and development to give them a short idea about the different methodologies
D**L
Great resource for understanding.
Great source and thinking. Illustrations could be better including charting three methods. Visual people.
D**Y
Cuts through the jargon to provide clear, concise descriptions and a forwardpath that works.
A refreshingly brief, no-nonsense, practical guide for leaders and practitioners who are struggling to implement new methodologies like lean, agile and design thinking. Gothelf cuts through the jargon and provides clear, concise descriptions of the main approaches and provides a path forward that blends and balances the best from each.
J**R
Avoid this book
expected much more. This book offers rudimentary explanations of each method. Design thinking is encapsulated in less than one page! Absolute waste of money buying and time spent reading.
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