Quantcast
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 130

Management 3.0

In his foreword of the book “Management 3.0” by Jurgen Appelo, Robert C. Martin wrote that he hates management books, but “this book is smart”. I think that this book might be smart because Jurgen is smart. If I try to summarize what you get from the book “Management 3.0” by Jurgen Appelo, you can consider the author as the hidden son resulting from a relationship between a Springer Verlag journal’s editor and Mike Cohn, with some influence from Aardman Studios in the education. You will therefore jump from sentences like “It is often seen as the opposite of reductionism, although complexity scientists believe that complexity is the bridge between the two, and both are necessary but insufficient [Corning 2002:69]” (I hope that you have all recognized the definition of “holism”) to a checklist for Agile Goals that contains questions like “is the goal manageable and measurable so that success can be determined?” You will therefore go back and forth between high level system or behavioral theories and practical management situations and practices. Despite its high theoretical content, the book is very enjoyable and easy to read and you shouldn’t be afraid by what could appear initially as a strong theoretical content. Jurgen Appelo is so smart that he even make the own assessment of his book at the end, based on the quote that “all models are wrong but some are useful” He says “It makes no sense discussing which idea is wrong, because they all are. The real [...]

The post Management 3.0 first appeared on Scrum Agile Project Management Expert.

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 130

Trending Articles