Transcript
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All change, from what I can see, starts with the gray matter between your ears first.
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You change your mindset.
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You change your thinking about something.
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Everything else unlocks, changes or shuts down.
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I mean, because you have.
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The opposite is exactly true.
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So a changemaker is somebody that changes themselves, takes a hero's journey and starts to create positive changes.
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Visible, measurable changes in their sphere of influence.
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Visible, measurable changes in their sphere of influence.
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Hey, uncommon Leaders, welcome back.
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This is the Uncommon Leader Podcast and I'm your host, john Gallagher.
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In today's episode, I've got the pleasure of chatting with the bestselling author and keynote speaker, felipe Engineer.
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Our conversation takes us into the dynamic realms of Agile and Scrum and their profound implications for leadership and productivity.
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Felipe gives us a personal look at his evolution from being an overworked engineer to a balanced and forward-thinking leader, and we emphasize the significance of recognizing our worth beyond professional and family labels and embarking on the path to self-actualization.
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Felipe doesn't just share his wisdom.
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He also opens up about practical tools and resources that can kickstart your journey in Agile and Scrum.
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Prepare for a dose of inspiration, as Felipe nudges you toward becoming a change maker, starting with the person in the mirror.
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Let's get started.
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Felipe Engineer, welcome to the Uncommon Leader podcast.
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It's great to have you on the show.
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How are you today, my friend?
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John, I'm doing really well.
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Thank you for having me on the show.
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It is a pleasure to be here with you.
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I can't wait.
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I I'm so happy that I had a chance to chat with you on your podcast and I know that, uh, by returning this favor here, the listeners of the uncommon leader podcast can have good time.
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I'm so glad that Doug had connected us and that we've had a chance to chat a little bit more.
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So let's jump right into this.
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The way I always get first-time guests started, and that's to tell me a story from your childhood that still impacts who you are today as a person or as a leader.
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Yeah, and this story goes back top of mind right away.
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It's got to be a story about my dad.
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My dad was incredible human being, an amazing leader.
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By all accounts.
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He's a hall of fame, illinois state soccer association hall of famer as well, not for playing, but for being president of a non-profit soccer league that grew from a couple hundred people to tens of thousands of people under his leadership, and that was uh, he served as president for over 13 years and it easily could have been longer.
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But as a kid I remember my dad dragging me to all these meetings I mean literally against my will, against my will, like a child.
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A child wants nothing to do with a meeting, right, it wants nothing and a decent kid and we were I mean, we were like every other kid.
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We want to play and have fun and be outside.
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But every now and then he'd bring me to these meetings and I'd get to see my dad's leadership style and I got to see my dad in like really calm situations, really intense situations.
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And I remember one time I was probably 13 or 14 at the time and we were at a soccer tournament and people apparently John get very into sports and sometimes will even do betting on sports.
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I mean, are you aware?
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I'm a little bit aware of that, absolutely.
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Yeah, and so some people had some money on a game and it wasn't going the way they liked and they were mad and they wanted to take it out on somebody because they were going to lose a sizable sum of money.
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And so they wanted to take it out on my dad, and my dad I remember him being just so calm and I think we had beer thrown on us and my dad did not get into a fight and he just he had so much grace, the way that he spoke with the person completely disarmed them immediately and in that moment I thought, man, there's a lot of stuff about my dad, I don't know Like.
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I realized like, and we had a really good talk on the way home after the day was over, we didn't leave.
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I mean, we my dad's like, mission first, you know, got to make sure everything runs well.
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There's, you know, probably in that game, easily 3,000 people on this.
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It was a series of tournaments that day, so there was a ton of people in and out.
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And our ride home, john, my dad unpacked all those things about what led up to that event how to put yourself in someone else's perspective, be empathetic in the moment, to put yourself in someone else's perspective, be empathetic in the moment and then he also shared like some tips of like how to be this way, at the snap of a finger, like you could just turn it on and turn it off, and, and I thought we need I said, dad, we need to talk more often.
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How come we've never talked like this before?
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He's like we never had beer thrown on us before.
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That's true.
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That trigger of, you know, almost being in a fight, like it was close, like we could have definitely gotten into a fight, and my instinct at 14 was like protect my dad.
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Sure, that instinct and my dad like held me back and he's like there's gonna be no fight.
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I mean, he was just so confident and I think what it really taught me was leader's mindset, like the mindset you bring into the situations If you set a couple of rules.
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And this is what my dad really taught me.
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He's like set a couple of rules for yourself and get really like intimate with those rules so that when situations arise, you just let those rules play and then you'll show up the way you want to show up, the leader that you want to be the example you want to be, felipe.
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I love that too.
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And again, certainly I love the stories when our family members have been influences on our life and what that means, and when I really listen in to what you're saying and some stories come back to my childhood as well with regards to my dad, and he was an excitable person.
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He was leading in volunteer groups and things like that as well, and you and I could chat about that for a long time and turn it out like this.
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But in listening to what your dad said, first of all, from a leadership standpoint especially, it's making that decision before you get into that situation that you're not going to learn as you go into making that decision beforehand.
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And then the second thing I heard and it's actually a book I read, I think, two years ago, the Power of One More was the word equanimity, which I never thought was a real word until I read that book and had to look it up in the dictionary.
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But having calm in the midst of chaos is such a critical attribute for a leader that can be successful, and that calmness is not necessarily a lack of passion for what's going on, but it's in the ability to be able to handle a stressful situation and get others through that situation as well and, to your point, diffuse or take off the excitement of the other party inside of that conversation Really cool.
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No, I appreciate you sharing that and I know I guarantee, in your role today, that becomes very important.
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So, felipe, you're an author, you are a podcast host and you are a lot of other things.
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The topic we're here to talk about today is something that is near and dear to your heart, that you're passionate about it, that you have a strength in it and they've delivered for a while, and that's the problem solving methodology of Agile or Scrum.
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And so, in fact, as I listened to your story, I thought about some of the things your dad probably had to do, almost like Agile and Scrum, to be organized for an event like that, to have thousands of people and to work his way through that.
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But tell me, how did you get into Agile and Scrum methodology?
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How did you become passionate about and scrum methodology?
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What?
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How did you?
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How'd you become passionate about that?
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What was it?
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Yeah, it was a complete, you know, workaholic type of existence is what I had.
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I was.
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I was one of those seven day a week working type of folks and it wasn't for ambition of trying to, like you know, get promoted.
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It was actually never for that it was.
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I'd looking back on it I was like, wow, I probably, I probably could have gotten promoted several times if I would have put some energy that way.
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You know just now, as it's striking me, that that was a mistake, but it was really just to keep my head above water.
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I wasn't thriving.
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I was working as a in construction project management side, right out of school, trained as an electrical engineer, and I felt like a fish out of water in the beginning.
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And the people I was working with had some really good mentors in the early days and they were of the mantra you know, just work harder, just work harder and everything will be fine, and that was the pervading mindset.
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So I took that work harder to an extreme and, as a young person, first project you get the short straw and you automatically are working every Saturday.
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So that was already happening.
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And then by the time I was done with the internship and then working full time I had gotten to the point where, well, if I work Saturday, what if I work a little bit on Sunday?
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Maybe I could catch up.
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But you get into this wave of never catching up.
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And then, many years later I actually had Bell's palsy in my mid-20s.
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And Bell's palsy is a type of virus that attacks.
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In my case it attacked the seventh nerve of my face and it paralyzed my face.
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It it can only really happen when you know whatever virus transmission plus, you have to be under uh, high stress.
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That stress has to be at a certain level so it can even get you.
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So for, for all of you listening, you know, just relax, you're going to be fine, just don't be stressed.
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And you have no chance.
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And so doctor said it looks, it shows up like a stroke, john, so your face gets paralyzed.
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My right eye couldn't even blink.
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I mean, that's how paralyzed my face was.
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And the doc's like you just take two weeks off from work and you'll fully recover.
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98% of all people, their face fully recovers.
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I talked to my dad and my dad's like yeah, it happened to me twice as a kid and he's like I recovered both times.
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He's like yeah, it happened to me twice as a kid and he's like I remember both times.
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He's like both times it happened to him in his 20s.
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He's like a lot of people in our family have actually had it and I never knew.
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They never talked about it Not one time, Because they don't talk about their 20s for some reason.
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But I went back to work two days later, John.
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So two days later my phone's blowing up.
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We're running this job downtown Chicago, high profile job, but right on Michigan Avenue, six North Michigan Avenue, beautiful building, historic restoration of the exterior facade, and I'm running.
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I'm very intimate in running a lot of the work that's happening.
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It was a very small team and so I was like very key player and my boss is like are you going to come back?
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And I said, well, I've got doctor's note for two weeks off.
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He's like I know, he's like I know, but if you want to come back, you can come back.
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So he was very gentle, very gentle pressure and I went back and when I went back I went right back to working 16 hours a day.
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So day three, I had to wear an eye because my eye wouldn't close and it's not safe to have your eye open all day and night, and so I'm wearing an eye patch, I look like a pirate.
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And I look back at that, John, and I'm like, probably on the path to killing myself with so much work, Like a heart attack at work not uncommon.
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Lots of people on you had had heart attacks at work.
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Definitely when you're working like that, you're not exercising every day, You're not eating right, and it was getting really bad.
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So we fast forward from that moment.
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Because I'm a slow learner, John, I didn't learn my lesson at that time.
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I'm at this work conference and I'm drinking by this point in the morning.
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It's a two-day conference where you have to physically be at this conference.
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You can't escape there's no escaping unless you're managing some critical work.
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So we're all at this work conference and the speaker comes up and he used to work in manufacturing and now he's a director of construction and he's presenting on these ideas of lean.
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You know stuff that you and Doug know and played with.
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I'm watching him and I'm drinking my coffee, like my 13th cup of coffee, and I noticed something.
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I was like this guy is like wide awake, this guy's not tired, he's not stressed.
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And then he has his team.
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His team comes up and they're talking about some of the things that they're doing and every single person on that team was strikingly happy.
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And I thought I looked around the room and I was like I don't even there's no other person in this.
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You know audience of like 500 people that looks like that.
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I was like I want that, I want that.
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So I I bum rushed him after his talk and I said how can I get like this, you know, with my now my 15th cup of coffee in my hand, cause I could barely stay awake.
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You know, with my now my 15th cup of coffee in my hand cause.
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I could barely stay awake, you know, having worked so many hours.
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I put in a full day by the time we got to Wednesday full week's work and he said the way to get into this is like we actually have a team and we read.
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We read a book, we're reading a book.
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I was like reading a book, john.
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I hadn't read a book since I graduated from college.
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It had been like 10 years.
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So I read a book.
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It's called lean thinking how to banish waste in your corporation or your organization by womack and jones.
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And then that leads to me joining the committee and it leads to me reading books regularly amazon right there.
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No, you got it right there.
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Yeah, yeah and I'm right back to me jeff sutherland's book Scrum the other, doing twice the work and half the time I consume that book.
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And now this is after two or three years of practicing lean in construction and I read Jeff's book, start reading it on a Wednesday, finish it by Friday because I have a commute to LA and I start using it that weekend.
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I test it with my son, who at the time was like three or four years old, and it worked.
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It worked on this kid and I thought, oh, it's working on this belligerent kid.
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My kid is very independent and I was like if it can work with this kid, it can work with anybody.
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So I went, still working.
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On Sunday, john, I went to a home improvement store, got a whiteboard, hung it in my office on Sunday, set my Kanban scrum board up and that's all I did.
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And then I went home and I told my wife, I'm going to try this out.
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And within a month not even a month, less than four weeks I doubled my productivity.
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And then I thought okay, this is so good.
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I talked to my team and they wanted nothing to do with it.
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They wanted nothing to do with it and I said I don't care, I doubled my productivity.
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You don't want to do it?
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That doesn't matter, I'm going to still do it anyway.
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So I just kept doing it through the whole project.
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That job finished a month ahead of schedule.
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We had zero claims.
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And finished a month ahead of schedule.
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We had zero claims.
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And that was uh, according to the owner's rep, unheard of.
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They've never.
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They've never had a project and with no claims ever.
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And they had been the, the cm owner's rep on that campus for over 12 years.
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And this was the first time.
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And one of the owners asked me he's like.
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He said we could tell like it felt different on your job as compared to the other ones on the campus, like what was the difference?
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And I was like I think it probably looks like attitude, but in reality I'm using this framework called scrum and I just kept using it.
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I kept trying it in different places and at that time I was a project manager, so I was using it as a project manager.
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The funny thing, john, is that it got me so effective.
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I could be in the field half the day.
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Half the day I could just be on site in the field, and so I was using that time to learn more how things come together, learning from the trades experience.
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People running work continue to develop my leadership skills, to develop my leadership skills, and then I've been using Scrum everywhere.
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And then, some years later, I published my own book about Scrum, called Construction Scrum, which is over my right shoulder.
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There you go, next to Elmo.
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Next to Elmo.
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Next to Elmo Felipe phenomenal way.
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First you used it to help solve a personal problem okay in terms of understanding.
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Then you helped your four-year-old utilizing a tool like Agile Scrum You've consumed it.
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The story about not reading a book I think you and I have a lot in common from that standpoint, in that I got out of college and said I'm never reading a book again.
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I was a mechanical engineer, not electrical engineer.
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And then it was about six or seven years later when I had a mentor give me a leadership book for the first time and I was hooked.
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What book was that?
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And the concept of Scrum, the concept of your board that you set up there.
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For those listeners who are in who may not know what Agile or Scrum is, maybe at a very high level.
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I say this high level, but put it on some simple words for us what is Agile and Scrum and how does it relate to lean and lean manufacturing?
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Yeah, let me start with Scrum and Agile together.
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Scrum is older.
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It was invented in the mid-90s, and then Agile came later, 2001,.
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A group of people got together in Snowbird, utah, at a resort, and they were joined together by one common thing are 12.
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I think it's 12 or 14.
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I don't have them all memorized yet.
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I know a couple of them from memory, but it's something that even I study and reread often, john.
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So Agile comes later, and one of the people at this manifesto that's working on this problem of how software is developed is Jeff Sutherland, who later becomes one of my mentors.
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At the time and you can read about Agile more, but for people it's a mindset.
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So these people came together to solve a problem and ultimately they came up with a series of principles and a series of four values and if you put them into practice and you can put them into practice regardless of contract type, you can even put them into practice in your family to some degree.
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You just have to substitute the word software for product, and product can be a service or a thing, and you can look at even how we relate to each other and our family is, you know, in service of others.
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So you definitely, with a little bit of synonyming that's a made up word you can have agile in all that you do.
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So the mindset is that you can adapt and make changes based on what reality is.
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I mean, that's in the essence.
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In the essence, agile with a capital A is just like agile with a small a, which you know you should be thinking.
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Adaptability, you should be the small a which you know you should be thinking.
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Adaptability, you should be thinking, experiencing, using all your senses.
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And then the values, like they have, one, excuse me.
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One of the values is that we value.
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Um, I'm going to have to.
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I'm gonna have to pull up the exact value, cause I don't want to, I don't want to butcher it.
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For sake of Sure, I'm going to jump it up real quick on the internet here, because I have that capability.
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So one of the first ones is this first value is super interesting, john.
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I think it ties in nicely with what we've been talking about.
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And the first value is that individuals and interactions over processes and tools and the reason if you, if you think, if you studied toyota I know you have and I know probably some of your audience has as well you know, in toyota they have this model called the four p's, and it's philosophy first, then people and if you, if you peel that back, and then there's like some other piece.
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I'm not going to mention the next two, but the people have the philosophy, the people have the mindset, the belief structure, and in Agile they have that same type of thinking.
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They brought in in that first value, like everything that people are going to do to get work done, or how they come together, is going to happen through them and how they think and believe.
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And so the individual people are more important, not to say the processes and tools aren't important, but they certainly are.
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And the values are very clear that they say you know, the things on the right are important, but the things mentioned first are priority.
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So people first, people first.
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So I think that's powerful.
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And then for Scrum, so that's agile.
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It's a set of values and principles.
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Scrum is a system of getting things done.
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It could be a delivery system or a decision-making system, or both, depending on where you're using it.
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If you're early in design and product development, it's a great decision making system because it brings forward decisions and it's good at prioritizing and breaking work down.
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And it's also a delivery system because if you're in the mix of now, you're making something like a building.
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You can take any type of work and most of the work we do in construction, with the exception of people actually putting things together, it's knowledge work, and knowledge work is mostly invisible.
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So scrum is a highly visual way to make things visible, put organization, break things down, get really clear on what you're going to deliver and then deliver it.
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And it has like this.
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It only has three roles scrum master, product owner and the team, the developers.
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And so I'm trained as a scrum master and then I also.
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And construction scrum is written from a scrum master's perspective and it's highly focused on you, you, the collective, you, whoever's listening, you being the scrum master of yourself and helping your team to deliver, very focused on delivering, very focused on delivering.
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And it's a great container, like.
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It's got very few rules and we can we can get into those rules if you want to, if it's interesting for the audience, but, like, one of the rules is that you break your work down small enough so that the end of a cycle that you decide how long your cycle is typically a week to four weeks.
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You know, you pick one and you stay with it.
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Like, my podcast podcast runs now on a four-week cycle.
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In previous years it used to run on a two-week cycle but now I've extended it to run on a one-month cycle, which means shows recorded, edited, worked on, social marketed, published All of that happens in less than a month and then we iterate.
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So, like, we get feedback from like, we got a show that went live at the beginning of this month.
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We're recording this now in february just had a show that that john has threatened to ask me questions about.
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That show was recorded in the summer of last year.
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But the feedback we close the feedback loop once it gets exposed to the wild, which is where we get audience questions and answers.
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And then that feedback we take, put it on a board and carry it into future shows, future questions, future marketing, how we talk to guests.