Industry insights and other news from the Nerd/Noir team.

News David Laribee News David Laribee

Boardroom Insight Interviews Anne Steiner

Anne Steiner, who joined Nerd/Noir recently, shares her thoughts DevEx, developer productivity, AI, and software product management.

Explore how Anne Steiner, who joined Nerd/Noir in March 2024, aims to transform software product management and team collaboration in traditional companies. Steiner discusses the role of AI in enhancing data analytics and why development velocity shouldn't be the only metric for success. Dive into the full interview for her insights on shaping high-impact product teams at Boardroom Insight.

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News, Developer Productivity, Metrics Alexandra West News, Developer Productivity, Metrics Alexandra West

Outcomes, Not Outputs: Making Measurement Meaningful

The article from DevOps Digest, authored by David Laribee, discusses the pitfalls of focusing solely on output metrics within software development and suggests a shift towards measuring outcomes instead.

This article from DevOps Digest, authored by Dave Laribee, discusses the pitfalls of focusing solely on output metrics within software development and suggests a shift towards measuring outcomes instead. Laribee illustrates how traditional metrics can lead to misguided efforts, such as gaming the system, and do not necessarily reflect meaningful progress or value. He advocates for outcome-based measurement, which focuses on the actual impact of work on customers and business goals, promoting a more effective and meaningful approach to assessing performance in software development environments.

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News, Product Alexandra West News, Product Alexandra West

Welcome Anne Steiner!

We’re proud to announce technology industry veteran and former Cprime CEO Anne Steiner is joining our company to lead business development.

Nerd/Noir, a consulting firm specializing in transforming large-scale, product engineering organizations, today announces technology industry veteran and former Cprime CEO Anne Steiner is joining the company to lead business development. Read more on Yahoo! Finance.

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5 Spicy Strategies for leading change

In this presentation, David Laribee, co-founder of Nerd/Noir, details practical strategies that have propelled his teams and clients to achieve more impactful and lasting outcomes while managing the many changes software development faces today.

Does the word “transformation” make you hesitant or skeptical? Maybe even cringe a little? If so, you’re not alone. Traditional approaches of top-down implementation, endless training, and exhaustive coaching often fall short of making a genuine impact.

In this presentation, David Laribee, co-founder of Nerd/Noir, details practical strategies that have propelled his teams and clients to achieve more impactful and lasting outcomes while managing the many changes software development faces today.

Thanks to SEP for hosting us - we always enjoy hanging out with this awesome crew!

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Making Developer’s Lives Easier

Hypepotamus talks with Nerd/Noir CEO David Laribee about the company’s strategies for improving developer productivity.

David Laribee chats with Hypepotamus about transforming developer productivity and corporate culture. We discuss our unique strategies in immersive learning and technical operations, aimed at enhancing digital transformation and business efficiency. Read more about Nerd/Noir's success in attracting big clients and fostering a vibrant work environment.

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Alexandra West Alexandra West

Improving Performance Without Killing Morale

Tech leaders, including our own David Laribee, discuss ten ways to keep both team performance and spirits strong and engaged.

Performance improvement should be approached holistically, not simply as a mandate that individual teams must fulfill. “Leaders need to understand and respect the capacity of their teams and prioritize accordingly,” says David Laribee, CEO of digital transformation services firm Nerd/Noir. Read the full article in CIO Magazine.

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Alexandra West Alexandra West

The Dangers of Development Teams Chasing Metrics

Discover ways to get teams focused less on data points and more on end goals. David Laribee lays out pitfalls and fallacies that revolve around development teams focusing too heavily on metrics instead of outcomes.

This article on PropertyCasualty360 discusses the potential drawbacks of development teams excessively focusing on metrics. David Laribee cautions against the common pitfalls associated with metric-centric approaches, including the manipulation of data to meet goals ("juking the stats"), the dangers of prioritizing a single metric which can stifle innovation, and the stagnation in goals that fail to evolve with team capabilities.

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Alexandra West Alexandra West

When Art and Tech Converge: Chatting with Alexandra West

Nerd/Noir COO Alexandra West speaks about her background in the art and entertainment fields and the lessons she brings to the world of tech.

Jennifer Didier interviews Alexandra West, COO of Nerd/Noir for the Tech in the Right Direction podcast.  Alexandra shares her journey from the world of art to technology, back to art and back again! Listen to her story of how her creative background has allowed her to experience and share a unique point of view.

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Alexandra West Alexandra West

Announcing our Partnership with DX

We’re thrilled to announce our partnership with DX, the trusted platform for measuring and improving developer experience. We’re now able to offer actionable insights in six weeks, accelerating our commitment to helping engineering organizations measure and improve developer productivity,

Today we announced our partnership with DX, the trusted platform for measuring and improving developer experience. This partnership enables Nerd/Noir to offer an exclusive six-week Discovery License of the DevEx 360 tool within our Developer Experience Insights program– which empowers businesses to benchmark performance, pinpoint the biggest opportunities for developers, and provide teams with individualized insights and recommendations. Read more on Yahoo Finance.

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Talks David Laribee Talks David Laribee

Dojo & Emergent Practices

In this Devopsdays Atlanta 2022 keynote, I explore how two, technical novel practices emerged from dojo environments.

The video below is from a keynote I did at Devopsdays Atlanta 2022. In it, I describe the concept of “novel practices” through two examples uncovered in dojos I’ve been involved with.

The first novel practice, Architectural Mapping, describes a mashup of mob programming, story mapping and journeys, and the C4 Model of Software Architecture.

The second novel practice, Refactoring with Telemetry, describes a method for combining static analysis tools with long binges of refactoring legacy code to drive conversations around code quality, quality metrics, and the impact a team can have over time in reducing entropy in a legacy codebase.

I continue to use these practices in my coaching today. The dojo is the perfect lab for this kind of practice innovation and real-time adaptation of so-called “best practices.”

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David Laribee David Laribee

Coaching as a Skill

Coaching, as a role in agile, has gotten a bit watered down in my opinion. People are entering the workforce with the title of coach. Coaching is a full career path. This was never the intent!

Coaching, as a role in agile, has gotten a bit watered down in my opinion. People are entering the workforce with the title of coach. Coaching is a full career path. This was never the intent!

I'm from the school of practical experience: in order to coach a thing, you must first be able to do that thing.  Effective coaches bring both knowledge and experience to their practice. They are equally confident in teaching and facilitation as they are jumping into a new team and working hands-on. 

People with experience – with success and failure stories, practical knowledge of building capability within past teams, and good pattern recognition to help them recognize what a team needs and when – have the best chance of success in a coaching engagement, dojo or otherwise.

Given these biases, I see coaching as a skillset over a role. Let’s talk dojo for a minute. Dojo coaches combine coaching chops, particularly within the constraints of the dojo, with other skills in product development, engineering, lean/agile workflow, DevOps, et al. Not only have they actually done what they're teaching and coaching, walking the walk, they know how to help others find success. Good dojo coaches are both experienced and socially capable. In this sense, a dojo coach is much like a team-oriented lead or senior staff member. They've had success in an area, and now they enjoy helping others to do the same. Spreading knowledge and capability to others is a common motivation for a dojo coach.

First: Define Coaching

I have a simple definition of coaching I use in Dojo Academy. A coach is anyone who helps a team or individual set, refine, and achieve their goals. They transmit their experience using storytelling to earn credibility and relate with the people they’re working with. They have skills and knowledge to transfer and use methods such as teaching, facilitation, and hands-on playing. Success for a coach means working your way out of a job; the team is proficient in the area you were coaching. They don’t need you anymore.

Problem: An Over-reliance on Professional Coaches from the Outside

I’ve been a part of numerous large-scale transformation initiatives, and there simply aren’t enough coaches to go around. You can’t hire 100-150 good coaches in a reasonable time period (or ever). Coaching won’t scale with a “hire all the coaches in the world” strategy. 

Most of the transformations I’ve been a part of have sourced coaches from third-party vendors, at least in part. While these individuals may (sometimes) be quick and adaptable, they usually lack knowledge around the firm’s culture, politics, systems, or other norms. A dojo helps level some of that by bringing teams to the coaches, but even the most venerable coach will be operating with a lot of ambiguity as they seek to adapt their knowledge to a team’s context.

I’m in no way arguing that coaching is a bad idea. I’ve seen coaching do a lot of good firsthand. People will lead transformation, always. That said, we can employ a few strategies when building coaching teams for our transformations and dojos.

Solution: Build Coaching Capability Internally

In their HBR article “The Leader as Coach”, Herminia Ibarra and Anne Scoular describe a trend toward building coaching skills within a company’s leadership and employees: 

“...we’ve noticed that more and more of the companies we work with are investing in training their leaders as coaches. Increasingly, coaching is becoming integral to the fabric of a learning culture—a skill that good managers at all levels need to develop and deploy.”

This is a strategy we’re employing with our more recent dojos. Rather than try and find a small army of engineering, product, and agility coaches from the outside, we find influential and talented people within the firm. We are literally growing coaches. The first step of this journey starts with our “Ready to Coach: Mentor-guided Cohort” in which we bring the coaching team together and, over the course of five weeks, cover dojo essentials and our proven playbook for guiding challenges. Candidate coaches then go into a months-long period of mentorship and support where we employ a “shadow-pair-do” model in getting coaches productive, comfortable, and running at a sustainable pace in their dojo.

Imagine a scenario where the career path of your senior engineers involved a rotation of coaching in the dojo – between 6 and 9 months. That’s a good chunk of time to develop a career-lasting set of social skills that complement an individual’s more technical or area-specific competencies.

So what about professional coaches? Do we not need them anymore? Not quite. Professional coaches – be they contractors or FTE roles in your organization – continue to have an important role in this strategy. I employ professional coach-consultants in our dojos as originators and mentors. These folks often operate as exemplar coaches and mentors for candidate coaches from within the firm, helping to define the coaching role for their area of expertise. Senior coaches also have a lot of input into the co-creation and evolution of the dojo program itself. I look at these folks as “force multipliers” – coaches who coach, well, coaches!

Coaching as aN ORGANIZATIONAL CAPABILITY

We set the expectation with our clients that dojos are 3-5 year investments. Dojos are all about building a learning culture within your organization. Unfortunately, those efforts won’t sustain when coaching isn’t an embedded skillset with leaders at all levels within an organization. If your transformation has a dependency on outside coaching, what happens when those coaches leave or costs stack up too high? Your dojo needs to guide teams in their challenge, sure, but it also needs to create a pervasive, expanding coaching skillset as the cornerstone of your burgeoning learning culture.

When I’m coaching a challenge, I seek to enroll members of the team in the coaching activity. “You know something about how continuous delivery works here. Can you show the rest of the team?” 

We can transfer the coaching skill in small ways like this, sure, but I’m arguing for a more systemic approach to building strong coaching skills in the product, technical, and workflow leads going through challenges. Mentor the promising individuals in your organization to coach challenges and teams themselves! Coaching skills embedded in these individuals travel with the team when they leave the dojo and increase the population capable of tending and growing a true learning culture.

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Alexandra West Alexandra West

Culture, Creativity and Collaboration

Alexandra West speaks with Emory University about pursuing creative work, creating a psychologically safe culture and the power of a great team.

Alexandra West visits her alma mater, Emory University, as a guest on the Eagle Eye Podcast. In this episode of the Creative Spark series, Alex discusses her career in the arts, building a great team, and the importance of “just being nice.” Listen to the episode here.

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