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Archive for August, 2009

Traditional vs. Agile Testing

August 30th, 2009 rsivanandan No comments

 

Well, a lot of Agile documents/online resources I’ve seen talk about more in the perspective of development and not much related to QA while those teams/models still utilize the QA for the same purpose – CERTIFY THE DELIVERABLE AND DO IT GOOD!

Elisabeth Hendrickson shares her perspective on how test teams can be more Agile based on her experiences working as a tester on Agile teams

 

 

This video is an hour long and is worth spending your time (credits : agile101.net)

Categories: Agile Tags: ,

One Million Ports Sold – Juniper

August 22nd, 2009 rsivanandan No comments

 

The latest information on Juniper’s success in diversified segments of market is the ‘Ethernet Platforms’.  Despite the recession;

Quarter over Quarter, pretty steady growth and as per Mike Banic, VP at Juniper Networks for Product Marketing “Based on the companies covered in the Dell’Oro report, over the past five quarters of revenue shipments, Juniper has grown its EX Series switch revenue faster than any enterprise Layer 2/Layer 3 switch vendor entering the market in the previous decade,”

Full News at Yahoo

Some interesting facts if we look back, Juniper had a wide variety of products and what was lacking in the portfolio was a ‘complete solution’, the switches. I used to wonder why haven’t they started a BU around this and based on the reputation and more importantly people like choices – it would only seem imperative that they need to have done this couple of years back and of course it would be a huge investment, can’t discount for that.

Instead of a vendor setting standards and price tags, a customer always would prefer a choice of vendors where he get to make the calls!

Great going Juniper…

At this point, something of strange nature is that the EVP of Ethernet Platforms Group at Juniper, Hitesh Sheth – moved over to Aruba to take a position of COO. This would be the first position at Aruba, a COO!

Full News at bizjournals

Categories: Juniper Tags:

Independence Day – 2009

August 17th, 2009 rsivanandan 2 comments

 

   This independence day was truly a colorful day for me for many reasons;

I own an apartment now in Bangalore and also this year the apartments’ association decided to have celebrations.

One of the key part that is personal to me is that my kiddo had her first stage show. There were 4 little stars who are barely 4-5; did an amazing full round of dancing, stealing all the hearts! The one in the blue dress would be my princess :-)

Taare Zameen Par Aagaye the!

Pandemic – well; the show must go on…

August 16th, 2009 rsivanandan No comments

 

Celebrations must go on whether it is Swine Flu or whatever it may be….

The above is one of the snip from TimesOfIndia! on the occasion of  Janmashtami

Categories: Life in general Tags:

Ten Habits of Incompetent Managers

August 6th, 2009 rsivanandan No comments

 

  After a long while, I felt encouraged to post this one from www.fastcompany.com

  Pretty intriguing and right information. The way I see this; this is not to blame yourselves or someone else, but come out of ‘self-deception’. One of the quickest response from any employee is to blame something on their Manager (I had my part too), but this is a relook at how you evaluate;

Bias against action:There are always plenty of reasons not to take a decision, reasons to wait for more information, more options, more opinions. But real leaders display a consistent bias for action. People who don’t make mistakes generally don’t make anything. Legendary ad man David Ogilvy argued that a good decision today is worth far more than a perfect decision next month. Beware prevaricators.

Secrecy: "We can’t tell the staff," is something I hear managers say repeatedly. They defend this position with the argument that staff will be distracted, confused or simply unable to comprehend what is happening in the business. If you treat employees like children, they will behave that way — which means trouble. If you treat them like adults, they may just respond likewise. Very few matters in business must remain confidential and good managers can identify those easily. The lover of secrecy has trouble being honest and is afraid of letting peers have the information they need to challenge him. He would rather defend his position than advance the mission. Secrets make companies political, anxious and full of distrust.

Over-sensitivity: "I know she’s always late, but if I raise the subject, she’ll be hurt." An inability to be direct and honest with staff is a critical warning sign. Can your manager see a problem, address it headlong and move on? If not, problems won’t get resolved, they’ll grow. When managers say staff is too sensitive, they are usually describing themselves. Wilting violets don’t make great leaders. Weed them out. Interestingly, secrecy and over-sensitivity almost always travel together. They are a bias against honesty.

Love of procedure: Managers who cleave to the rule book, to points of order and who refer to colleagues by their titles have forgotten that rules and processes exist to expedite business, not ritualize it. Love of procedure often masks a fatal inability to prioritize — a tendency to polish the silver while the house is burning.

Preference for weak candidates: We interviewed three job candidates for a new position. One was clearly too junior, the other rubbed everyone up the wrong way and the third stood head and shoulders above the rest. Who did our manager want to hire? The junior. She felt threatened by the super-competent manager and hadn’t the confidence to know that you must always hire people smarter than yourself.

Focus on small tasks: Another senior salesperson I hired always produced the most perfect charts, forecasts and spreadsheets. She was always on time, her data completely up-to-date. She would always volunteer for projects in which she had no core expertise — marketing plans, financial forecasts, meetings with bank managers, the office move. It was all displacement activity to hide the fact that she could not do her real job.

Allergy to deadlines: A deadline is a commitment. The manager who cannot set, and stick to deadlines, cannot honor commitments. A failure to set and meet deadlines also means that no one can ever feel a true sense of achievement. You can’t celebrate milestones if there aren’t any.

Inability to hire former employees: I hired a head of sales once with (apparently) a luminous reputation. But, as we staffed up, he never attracted any candidates from his old company. He’d worked in sales for twenty years — hadn’t he mentored anyone who’d want to work with him again? Every good manager has alumni, eager to join the team again; if they don’t, smell a rat.

Addiction to consultants: A common — but expensive — way to put off making decisions is to hire consultants who can recommend several alternatives. While they’re figuring these out, managers don’t have to do anything. And when the consultant’s choices are presented, the ensuing debates can often absorb hours, days, months. Meanwhile, your organization is poorer but it isn’t any smarter. When the consultant leaves, he takes your money and his increased expertise out the door with him.

Long hours: In my experience, bad managers work very long hours. They think this is a brand of heroism but it is probably the single biggest hallmark of incompetence. To work effectively, you must prioritize and you must pace yourself. The manager who boasts of late nights, early mornings and no time off cannot manage himself so you’d better not let him manage anyone else.

Any one of these behaviours should sound a warning bell. More than two — sound the alarm!