Get Agile Podcast
Agile Coaches from ProCognita interview our friends and guests.
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Get Agile #33 | Theory behind Scrum | Alex Sloley
07/17/2025
Get Agile #33 | Theory behind Scrum | Alex Sloley
Alex Sloley, Agile Coach, sits with Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita to discuss how Scrum teams can learn the ‘whys’ of Scrum. They examine three pillars and five values, and how these can be applied to enhance events, accountabilities, and artifacts. Analyzing examples from their experience, they check how organizations can avoid ‘Robotic Scrum’, where people follow mechanics, but don’t see any value in doing that. They discover that understanding of the theory behind Scrum cannot be enforced, as opposed to mandating events or artefacts, and they search for ways managers can help teams develop curiosity to learn and apply empiricism in practice. To learn more about Alex, visit his website https://alexsloley.com/. You can find his book there as well - The Agile Community https://alexsloley.com/books. Other resources mentioned during the conversation: E. Deming website The Goal book by E. Goldrat https://www.amazon.pl/Goal-Anniversary-Process-Ongoing-Improvement/dp/0884271951 This podcast was recorded during the Regional Scrum Gathering Dhaka 2025 (https://dhakaregional.com/). You can find Alex’s keynote at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DeAgtJzM8Zw
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Get Agile #32 | Improving knowledge work delivery with Kanban | Todd Little
06/05/2025
Get Agile #32 | Improving knowledge work delivery with Kanban | Todd Little
Todd Little, chairman of the Kanban University, calls himself an ‘accidental agilist’. He joins Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita to discuss why the Agile movement is failing in a lot of companies, which often leads to ‘Agile is dead’ statements. They start by looking at how agile courses make people happy, but don’t deliver what they promise. Then they check why comparing Scrum to Kanban doesn’t make sense and deep dive into the Kanban approach to improving knowledge work delivery. Todd explains why the Kanban approach prefers smaller changes over large transformations, as the former can often bring significant improvements. They discuss whether the ‘meet them where they are’ approach can lead to a local optimum of ‘better waterfall’, and how the organization can improve by understanding delays and managing dependencies. Learn more about Todd at and about Kanban University at . This podcast was recorded during the Regional Scrum Gathering Dhaka 2025(. You can find Todd’s keynote at .
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Get Agile #31 | The hidden costs of async code reviews | Dragan Stepanovic
03/07/2025
Get Agile #31 | The hidden costs of async code reviews | Dragan Stepanovic
“No one wants to review PR that took one week or more to develop,” says Dragan Stepanovic, Principal Engineer who helps companies and teams evolve their engineering culture. In this episode of the Get Agile Podcast, Tomasz Wykowski from Procognita meets with Dragan to deep dive into the unrealized consequences of async code reviews. Dragan shows how developers are often forced to work in isolation and instead of forming one team, they become N teams of one person. Often with different engineering culture and coding practices. Code reviews are industry standard in software development, used in many organizations, but most of them aren’t aware of the hidden costs. As Dragan explains, on one hand engineers prefer small pull requests, which lead to a faster feedback loop, better code quality, a higher likelihood of refactor, and more engagement. On the other hand, small changes generate more waiting time. As a consequence, developers end up with large peer reviews, which are often performed in a rush. “Never had a big PR that didn’t look good to me” says Dragan. They look into alternative approaches, called ‘co-creation patterns’, reducing transaction costs by letting developers work together. Dragan explains how to start, what are the biggest obstacles, and how to overcome them. Learn more about Dragan at https://www.linkedin.com/in/dstepanovic/. You can find his article about async code reviews at InfoQ The recordings from the Talk LeSS conference 2024 can be found at Previous episodes mentioned during the conversation: The interview with Woody Zuill: The interview Tim Ottinger: Other resources mentioned in the conversation: Woody Zuill book: Mob Mentality Show by Chris Lucian and Austin Chadwick and their two Trello boards (Software Profession Resources: , Companies that Mob/Ensemble Program )
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Get Agile #30 | How do you get people to collaborate? | Jim Benson
10/30/2024
Get Agile #30 | How do you get people to collaborate? | Jim Benson
"The longer you put off talking to your colleagues, the more likely it is, that you're going to have integration problems", says Jim Benson in his conversation with Tomasz Wykowski. They start their conversation with The Collaboration Equation, which is “Individuals x Teams = Value. Jim explains that teams are covered by the Agile movement, and Value is discussed in Lean, but the individuals are somehow forgotten - the way they interact, work with each other, help each other, monitor their work, and are self-aware of what they lend to the team and what they gain from it. Jim defines professionals as people wanting to do the right thing at the right time and wanting to do it better next time. He shows how Value Stream Mapping can help them improve by visualizing their work, pain points, emotions, and confusion. The moment they understand how they cause problems to others they can create their own reasons to collaborate and define the right environment to work as professionals. You can learn more about Jim and his services at: Jim’s four books: The Collaborative Equation Why limit WIP Why Plans Fail Personal Kanban Two other books mentioned by Jim during the conversation: Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman This interview was recorded during ACE! Conference () in Krakow, Poland with support from Pragmatic Talks ( Tim’s talk from ACE! Conference 2024: .
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Get Agile #29 | Why Agile Teams Need Extreme Programming Practices? | Tim Ottinger
09/26/2024
Get Agile #29 | Why Agile Teams Need Extreme Programming Practices? | Tim Ottinger
“CI is developers' behavior, it has nothing to do with running Jenkins,” says Tim Ottinger, XP coach from Industrial Logic. Join Tomasz Wykowski, from ProCognita as he interviews Tim Ottinger about the ongoing relevance of Extreme Programming in modern software development. They look at the state of different XP practices, including TDD, CI/CD, User Stories, Swarming, Pairing, and Teaming. Tim explains why these behaviors are necessary for teams to iteratively develop product, and how they differ from “solo ticket processing” commonly used in software development. Tim discusses how XP emphasizes working together, prioritization of the work, and the delivery of end-to-end features. He explains that developers know about 1-5% of the codebase and therefore their work must focus on continuous learning. This cannot be limited to the installation of new tools but requires changes in behaviors. Tim shares insights on fostering a culture of continuous improvement and provides valuable resources for teams looking to elevate their agile practices. You can learn more about Tim at , read his posts at , and visit the Industrial Logic website at . The Swarm Programming article mentioned in the interview: YouTube Channels mentioned by Tim: Dave Farley Continuous Delivery: Emily Bache on TDD: This interview was recorded during ACE! Conference () in Krakow, Poland with support from Pragmatic Talks () Tim’s talk from ACE! Conference 2024:
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Get Agile #28 | Designing organization with Org Topologies | Alexey Krivitsky
08/20/2024
Get Agile #28 | Designing organization with Org Topologies | Alexey Krivitsky
Join Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita as he sits down with Alexey Kryvitsky, Certified Scrum Trainer, Certified LeSS Trainer, and co-creator of Org Topologies. Together they discuss how to avoid making the implementation of the Agile framework as an organizational goal. Alexey introduces the concept of Org Topologies as a mapping technique to help companies discover where they are, where they want to be, and how to get there. He discusses two dimensions of the map, which are the scope of capabilities and the scope of work. Then he explains each of the four levels on both axis. They discuss the role of the managers in driving organizational development, how they can set their goals, and how their role and responsibility will change when moving to different parts of the Org Topologies map. Alexey also gives examples of how the tool can be used to discuss where the company is and where it wants to be, and how different Agile frameworks can support this development. Learn more about Alexey at and watch his talk from ACE! Conference at About Org Topologies: Org Topologies™, a visual framework-agnostic approach designed to help organizations optimize their structure and processes by focusing on thoughtful organizational design. This helps organizations gain higher levels of adaptability. It provides guides such as Elevating Structures™ to help organizations progress on their transformation journeys with a clear direction toward the target state. Find out more at and . This interview was recorded during ACE! Conference (https://aceconf.com) in Krakow, Poland with support from Pragmatic Talks (.
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Get Agile #27 | Intent-Based Leadership | Jenni Jepsen
07/18/2024
Get Agile #27 | Intent-Based Leadership | Jenni Jepsen
Intent-Based Leadership is a way of leading when we give control based on technical competencies and organizational clarity. Created by David Marquet, author of “Turn the Ship Around” it was popularized in the Agile community by Jenni Jepsen. Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviews Jenni, on why Intent-Based Leadership works, and how to apply it. Jenni starts with David’s story on how he learned that one man cannot think for the whole submarine crew. She explains the main concept of Intent-Based Leadership, which is to give intent and take actions, rather than ask for permission and wait. To achieve this, she says, people need to obtain both technical competencies and clarity on the goal. They discuss how it can be used for both leaders who want more autonomy and responsibility on their teams, and team members who’d like to change the way they’re managed. Jenni describes The Ladder of Leadership which starts with “tell me what to do” and moves up through “I see…”, “I think…”, “I’d like to do…”, and “I intend to do…”. She shows that the last step is when employees don’t have to wait for permission. During the conversation, they look at how leaders can develop their skills and how they can understand their triggers to avoid returning to old behaviors under stress. They cover the development of competencies and how to ensure the right information is available when people are making decisions. Jenni company page: goAgile.dk Her book: TOGETHER – How leaders involve & engage people to get great things done More on Ladder of Leadership: David Marquet's website: His book: Turn the Ship Around! This interview was recorded during ACE! Conference () in Krakow, Poland with support from Pragmatic Talks () Jenni keynote from ACE! Conference 2024:
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Get Agile #26 | How to start LeSS adoption? | Viktor Grgic
12/19/2023
Get Agile #26 | How to start LeSS adoption? | Viktor Grgic
“You need to make a distinction between which direction you’re going and what you’re going to do as a first step,” says Viktor Grgic, Certified LeSS Trainer. In this episode of the Get Agile podcast Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita talks with Viktor about his approach to LeSS transformations. He shares his experience in finding people responsible for organizational structure, with whom he starts conversations on the identification of the problems to solve, not the symptoms to address. Victor explains how he educates decision-makers on the root causes of the current situation and helps companies identify the starting groups. He shows how the feature team adoption map helps define the first steps in the LeSS adoption, and how the team self-designing workshops are used to define new company structure. Companies finish the workshop with both clear goal in mind and the first steps to take, or where they want to be in one year. Viktor emphasizes why owning the change by the group is critical to the success of the transformation, and why the most difficult part of the adoption happens after the workshops. You can learn more about Viktor at: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vgrgic/ His talk from the AgileByExample 2023 conference in Warsaw, Poland: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wht5CbGFE9A
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Get Agile #25 | Leadership Agility for better decision making | Pete Behrens
10/25/2023
Get Agile #25 | Leadership Agility for better decision making | Pete Behrens
Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita meets with Pete Behrens, a Leadership Coach and Founder of the Agile Leadership Journey (ALJ), a community devoted to improving leaders and their organizations. Together they discuss how the Agile Leadership Journey provides its members with a pragmatic approach to leadership and how leaders can think, behave, and make better decisions using different models from ALJ. “There’s no better or worse, there’s more awareness and choice,” says Pete, explaining the Leadership Agility model. He describes three main stages of self-awareness as a leader: Expert, Achiever, and Catalyst. Together, Tomasz and Pete look at each stage's main characteristics, strengths, and weaknesses, analyzing how these leaders behave, make decisions, or create a strategy. Pete explains what hollow leadership is and how leaders shape culture. He also clarifies how reflections help leaders grow and how they can get feedback from peers, using systemic approaches such as 360 reviews, or informal feedback sessions. Finally, they discuss leaders' behaviors during stress and where the firefighting culture might be coming from. Two books mentioned by Pete: Managing for Excellence Leadership Agility Learn more about Agile Leadership Jurney at and find Pete's profile at
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Get Agile #24 | The Leadership Shift | Zuzi Sochova
05/24/2023
Get Agile #24 | The Leadership Shift | Zuzi Sochova
“Leadership is a state of mind, so everyone is a leader,” says Zuzi Sohova, Certified Scrum Trainer in her conversation with Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita. Together they discuss the role of a leader in modern organizations and how they need to change from the position of power to the position of influence. Zuzi shares her story of becoming Scrum Master, what was her greatest challenge, and the biggest change she needed to make. She tells how coaching helped her on her path and how she now works with executives to help them find their dreams. They also discuss how confidence and courage are necessary for leaders to try new things, and how different types of leaders work with their teams. You can learn more about Zuzi at Find Zuzi’s books at: The Great ScrumMaster: The Agile Leader: You can read about ORSC at
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Get Agile #23 | Making Reliable Promises | Angel Diaz-Maroto
04/05/2023
Get Agile #23 | Making Reliable Promises | Angel Diaz-Maroto
How often your organization fails to deliver on the promise? How many deadlines were not met, or the goals not achieved? "The biggest responsibility of leadership is to ensure that promises keep on working on time," says Angel Diaz-Maroto, Certified Enterprise Coach, and Certified Scrum Trainer. During his recent visit to Warsaw, Poland, he joined Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita to discuss the elements of reliable promises. Together, they look at building promises in a dynamic, agile environment, and how to create these on task, output, and outcome levels. Angel explains how reliable promises build trust, which creates a culture of responsibility that leads to responding to customers' needs and delivering results. He shares his thoughts on how promises work with the OKR method. Building on that, they discuss how different people react to challenging and stressful targets, and what can be the consequences of creating an unrealistic goal. Finally, Angel explains how the leader can move the organization from one that fails to deliver on promises to a company that creates (and deliver on) realistic goals. You can learn more about Angel at Two books by Fred Kofman mentioned during the conversation: Conscious Business The Meaning Revolution Bob Dunham Generative Leadership website Natalia Cordova and other members of the DM Agile Coaching team can be found at
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Get Agile #22 | Personal Agility | Peter Stevens
02/28/2023
Get Agile #22 | Personal Agility | Peter Stevens
“Time is your most valuable currency,” says Peter Stevens, co-author of the “Personal Agility” book. “How you choose to spend this currency says a lot about what you care about.” In this episode of the Get Agile Podcast, Peter joins Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita to discover the patterns behind Personal Agility. Peter explains how to discover things that really matter and how to navigate between them. He shows why it’s not a process to follow, but a set of patterns, and what are the six powerful questions to ask during the “celebrate and choose” event. They also discuss what is the role of the celebration partner, and how they can help with Personal Agility. Last but not least, they look at how to extend Personal Agility beyond a single person to the team o organizational level, how to create alignment between stakeholders, and how to improve company effectiveness by reducing time spend on endless meetings. You can learn more about “Personal Agility: Unlocking Purpose, Alignment and Transformation” book at And find its authors at: Peter B. Stevens Maria Materelli
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Get Agile #21 | Maximize learning to maximize value creation | Bas Vodde
11/02/2022
Get Agile #21 | Maximize learning to maximize value creation | Bas Vodde
The Agile movement led to the creation of customer-focused, independent teams. In many cases, however “independence” means “we don’t need to talk to each other” and “don’t touch our code” rather than “we’re not blocked by another team”. During the LeSS Conference in Warsaw, Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviewed Bas Vodde, co-creator of LeSS. They discuss the consequences of defining the product from the customer perspective versus the technology perspective, and how broader product definition impacts both the organizational structure and the need for collaboration between teams. They look at how private code limit cooperation and learning, how to maximize individual and team learning, why it’s important from the company perspective, and how developers can start building the habit of continuous knowledge creation. Learn more about LeSS at https://less.works/, and about Bas at https://less.works/profiles/bas-vodde. The mentioned book “Debugging the development process” can be found at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Debugging-Development-Process-Practical-Strategies/dp/1556156502
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Get Agile #20 | What is Agile's bigger role? | Lyssa Adkins
04/27/2022
Get Agile #20 | What is Agile's bigger role? | Lyssa Adkins
“Agile has crossed the chasm,” said Lyssa Adkins during the conversation with Tomasz Wykowski in Dublin. It was almost five years ago so they’re returning to this conversation to define Agile’s landscape and see how it evolved over the last few years. Lyssa, the co-founder of Agile Coaching Institute, currently focuses on helping leaders understand the changes happening around them. Listen to their conversation to learn why she avoids working with the leadership team from the agile perspective, why she doesn’t do what she’s often asked for, and what she does instead. Tomasz and Lyssa also discuss how Agile has evolved over the years, and how the nature of the change has changed as well. They’re looking for potential new areas to apply patterns created in software development and how it impacts what Agile Coaches do and focus on. More resources: “Agile has crossed the chasm. What does it mean for Agile Coaches?” article Lyssa Adkins’s website: “Coaching Agile Teams” book written by Lyssa: “Lead Together” book narrated by Lyssa “What It Takes to Lead Through an Era of Exponential Change” article from HBR Learn more about the Get Agile podcast at
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Get Agile #19 | The Responsibility Process in the Time of War | Christopher Avery
03/09/2022
Get Agile #19 | The Responsibility Process in the Time of War | Christopher Avery
The war in Ukraine often leads to frustration and feeling of powerlessness. This special episode of the Get Agile podcast was recorded less than 48h after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita discusses with Christopher Avery how the Responsibility Process can be applied to address anxiety caused by a conflict between what we want and what we have. Listen to their conversation to learn how to avoid laying blame, justifying, or feeling guilt and understand what you want to take full Responsibility instead. You can learn more about the Responsibility Process at https://responsibility.com/. The poster can be downloaded from https://responsibility.com/the-responsibility-process-poster/ and the book is available at https://responsibility.com/the-responsibility-process/
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Get Agile #18 | Menlo Innovations - How did company culture make it succeed in the pandemic world? | Richard Sheridan
02/02/2022
Get Agile #18 | Menlo Innovations - How did company culture make it succeed in the pandemic world? | Richard Sheridan
Menlo Innovations has created a unique culture of teamwork, collaboration, communication, and relationship. This led to specific practices, such as the whole company working only in pairs, having one stand-up for 50-60 people that last 13 minutes, high-tech anthropologists observing users, visual planning, and extreme interviewing. But in March 2020 everything changed, as the whole company was moved to the virtual world. In this interview, Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita talks with Richard Sheridan, CEO of Menlo Innovations on how the company succeeded in the pandemic world. Join them to learn about experiments Menlonian did, how they adapted their practices to the new reality, what worked, and what didn’t. Learn more about Joy at Menlo . You can visit Menlo virtually at . Books about Menlo Innovations: Joy, Inc.: Chief Joy Officer: https://menlo-innovations.myshopify.com/collections/all/products/chief-joy-officer A Friday Filled with Joy: https://menlo-innovations.myshopify.com/collections/all/products/a-friday-filled-with-joy Get Agile podcast:
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Get Agile #17 | How can the Agile movement help companies affected by disruption? | Robin Dymond
12/21/2021
Get Agile #17 | How can the Agile movement help companies affected by disruption? | Robin Dymond
Many managers hold assumptions that stop their companies from changing the way they operate. The pandemic, climate change, and other recent disruptions have challenged these assumptions, making supply chains fragile, introducing chaos in stable environments, and forcing companies to question their core business practices. Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita discusses with Robin Dymond, Certified Scrum Trainer how the Agile movement can help non-software firms, including construction and oil & gas companies, go through the profound change - how to create more adaptive and more resilient organizations, how and where to start, how to reach leaders from these companies, and how to build trust with them. Additional resources: Learn more about Robin Dymond and his work at Innovel website: New UN report: Step up climate change adaptation efforts, or face huge disruption Extreme Weather Cost U.S. Taxpayers $99 Billion Last Year, and It Is Getting Worse Climate change: Disruption, risk and opportunity Climate Disruption Is Now Locked In. The Next Moves Will Be Crucial. Learn more about Get Agile podcast at
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Get Agile #16 | Fearless Change | Linda Rising
11/05/2021
Get Agile #16 | Fearless Change | Linda Rising
How do we change organizations? How do we change ourselves? Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita and Linda Rising, author, lecturer, and independent consultant discuss why change is hard, how companies can introduce it by running small experiments and why they can’t create a schedule for transformation. Listen to their conversation to understand why running around with checklists won’t help you much, what to do instead, and what are critical factors for successful change. Additional resources: Linda Rising website: Fearless Change patterns and book: Change or Die book by Alan Deutschman: Slack book by Tom DeMarco:
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Get Agile #15 | Changing Company Culture | Scott Dunn
08/24/2021
Get Agile #15 | Changing Company Culture | Scott Dunn
Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita and Scott Dunn, Certified Scrum Trainer discuss company culture and why it often leads to failure of Agile adoption. Learn what you need to know about the culture as a leader, how to understand where you currently are using the Competing Values Framework, how to create a vision of where you want to be, and finally, how to design the experiments that will help in the change. As the company culture changes, so does the leader’s role, moving from ‘expert’ to ‘coach and facilitator’. Learn more about Scott at . Mentioned resources: Patrick Lencioni “The Advantage” book: Jim Collins “Good to Great” book: Competing Values Framework V2MOM method from Salesforce described by Scott here: and there’s a free tool from Salesforce Path to Agility overview: and website: Version One surveys:
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Get Agile #14 | Building the versatile organization | Jurgen Appelo
07/21/2021
Get Agile #14 | Building the versatile organization | Jurgen Appelo
In this episode Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviews Jurgen Appelo, creator of the Management 3.0 movement. Join them to hear ideas behind the versatile organization and how organizations can thrive in the post-covid world. Learn why companies should abandon the product approach and focus on designing a consistent experience for their users, how to ensure collaboration between organizational departments, what are the challenges of tools such as OKRs, and how to avoid them. You’ll also find out why Jurgen thinks that stable teams are no longer an optimal solution for companies and what’s the alternative. Learn more about Jurgen at and . You can also read about Shiftup at Mentioned books: Team Topologies: Dynamic Reteaming: Interview with Jurgen in Agile to agility podcast by Miljan Bajic:
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Get Agile #13 | Why is Scrum Minimally Prescriptive? | Angela Johnson
06/23/2021
Get Agile #13 | Why is Scrum Minimally Prescriptive? | Angela Johnson
Join Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita and Angela Johnson, Certified Scrum Trainer from Collaborative Leadership Team. Find out why Scrum is missing many Agile practices like User Stories, Velocity, or Definition of Ready, why Scrum courses are more about unlearning than learning, and why starting using Scrum can be Scary. Finally, learn what A-word and Project Management Hangover are. Learn more about Angela at and find her blog at
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Get Agile #12 | Working in Remote Environment | Lisette Sutherland
05/10/2021
Get Agile #12 | Working in Remote Environment | Lisette Sutherland
Join Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita and Lisette Sutherland, Director of Collaboration Superpowers. Learn do and don’ts of working efficiently in a remote environment. Find out why the future is becoming a hybrid working environment and how to prepare for it. Useful resources: Remote Work Success Kit - Workshops - Podcast - Book - Learn more about Get Agile podcast at
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Get Agile #11 | Training from the Back of the Room | Nicole Fleming
04/13/2021
Get Agile #11 | Training from the Back of the Room | Nicole Fleming
Join Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita and Nicole Fleming, Training From the Back of the Room Certified Trainer and Certifier. Learn about brain-based learning and how to make your training more effective and engaging. Find out how to move from the stage to be a guide for your participants. Discover principles behind Training from the Back of the Room approach and how to move your physical courses into the virtual world. Learn more about Nicole at and about her courses at More resources on Training from the Back of the Room Website: Book: The Ten-Minute Trainer book: Visit Get Agile Podcast page at
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Get Agile #10 | Professional Coaching in Agile | Lucia Baldelli
03/15/2021
Get Agile #10 | Professional Coaching in Agile | Lucia Baldelli
Get Agile podcast: In this episode, Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviews Lucia Baldelli, ICF Certified Professional Coach and Scrum Alliance Certified Enterprise Coach about bringing professional coaching into the Agile world. Listen to their conversation to learn how Lucia works with both teams and management, how she creates contracts and builds trust and when it's the right moment to provide knowledge, options or questions. Learn more about Lucia at Additional links: International Coaching Federation (ICF): Scrum Alliance Agile Coaching Program:
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Get Agile #9 | Stakeholders Value | Tom Gilb
12/24/2020
Get Agile #9 | Stakeholders Value | Tom Gilb
In this episode, Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviews Tom Gilb about defining Customer Value. Learn about Tom’s EVO method and why one goal is not enough for your product. Learn more about Tom from Tom’s talk at TedxTrondheim “Quantify the un-quantifiable” You can find Tom’s Value Requirements book in ProCognita Free Agile Handouts: Get Agile podcast:
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Get Agile #8 I Mob Programming I Woody Zuill
12/02/2020
Get Agile #8 I Mob Programming I Woody Zuill
In this episode, Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviews Woody Zuill about Mob Programming. Join them to learn where the name comes from, how to start, what to expect during mobbing sessions, and common pitfalls to avoid. Mentioned resources: Mob Programming book: Mob Programming website: Where to practice online: , , and Coding Dojo: A day of Mob Programming Videos: and Get Agile podcast:
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Get Agile #7 | Scrum Patterns | Arne Ahlander
11/02/2020
Get Agile #7 | Scrum Patterns | Arne Ahlander
In this episode, Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviews Arne Ahlander, Certified Scrum Trainer from Sweden about Scrum Patterns. Learn more about Arne Ahlander at Scrum Patterns links: A Scrum Book: The Spirit of the Game Collection of patterns from the book Patterns community -
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Get Agile #6 | Kaizen - making employee life easier | Kiro Harada
09/14/2020
Get Agile #6 | Kaizen - making employee life easier | Kiro Harada
In this episode Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviews Kiro Harada, Agile Practitioner from Japan, who was involved in development of the supply chain system for Toyota. Listen to their conversation about how Toyota Production System was initially misunderstood and how to transfer Lean Principles into the software development world.
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Get Agile #5 | Agile Engineering Practices | Ron Jeffries and Chet Hendrickson
08/18/2020
Get Agile #5 | Agile Engineering Practices | Ron Jeffries and Chet Hendrickson
In this episode Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviews Ron Jeffries and Chet Hendrickson - people who were involved in the creation of: Extreme Programming, Agile Manifesto (Ron is one of the authors, Chet is the first signatory) and Certified Developer Program by Scrum Alliance. Plus a few other things.
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Get Agile #4 | Agile Hardware Development | Joe Justice
07/21/2020
Get Agile #4 | Agile Hardware Development | Joe Justice
Tomasz Wykowski from ProCognita interviews Joe Justice, Certified Scrum Trainer, TEDx speaker, founder of WIKISPEED, and creator of the Extreme Manufacturing and Scrum@Hardware methods. Hear how companies are increasing agility in their hardware product development and what Tesla is doing differently from all other car manufacturers. Learn more about Joe Justice at Links: The Scrum Master book by Joe Justice: Tesla Factory Tour with Elon Musk: Joe Justice analyzes SpaceX Boca Chica, TX:
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