What I like about it
- Gave a point of view on power uncommon and interesting
- It is about politics which do you a lot when 'preaching' scrum
- Content, pictures, references, humour, interactions
- Understanding power (a bit) finally!
- Insightful, fun, very valuable
- It ties in with my own presentation (fearless change), but goes into another aspect of changing things
- Alternative insight
- Complete paranoia
- Interesting information. Useful tips, forces a different way of thinking
- Very fluent speaker
- Innovative approach to agile
- Attractive slides
- Subject, makes me think
- Honesty on use of power
- Gave me a different, non-negative view of power
- Reshuffle subject
- The practical examples (I knew about the secredery)
- The content: owed, who has it, how to gain, what kind of power and influence exists
- Tips from the presenter and the audience
- Openness on power plays
To improve
- List all types of power at least once
- More links to agile development in general, not just linked to coaching
- Arrive on time
- Make it longer, so there's more time to do exercises in practice
- More... Time!
- Remove list slides
- Less theory
- A practical or two
- Go deeper into the subject with more samples (I.e. Make it longer)
- Not all managers are caricatural
- Turn up on time! Some other exercises sounded interesting, and it's a shame that we didn't get to go through them
- Make the presentation more coherent. I did not get the shift from political economics to types of managers
- Make more links to agile
- A couple of examples of 'low level' use of power e.g. with scrum teams
- Exercise
- Have more case studies, practical tips
- Enough time, start on time
- More agile edge would be great, any specific for agile would do good
- Session came across as very generic on power plays