Episodios

  • The Three Paths Scrum Opens
    Feb 17 2026

    The Three Paths Scrum Opens

    I have watched teams celebrate their “perfect Sprint.” Every ceremony attended. Every artifact updated. Every role filled. And yet their product no closer to solving the user’s problem than it was three Sprints ago. They’d mistaken the map for the journey.

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    5 m
  • The Agile Manifesto - 2026
    Feb 16 2026

    The Agile Manifesto - 2026


    Please visit:

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    7 m
  • The Heart That Outlived Time - The Story of Valentines
    Feb 13 2026

    The Heart That Outlived Time - The Story of Valentines

    Imagine ancient Rome, nearly two thousand years ago. Streets echo with the clang of armor, the scent of incense, and the whispers of love forbidden.

    There lived a humble priest named Valentinus. He wasn’t a rebel or a warrior—just a man who believed deeply in love. At that time, Emperor Claudius II had outlawed marriage for young soldiers, claiming that single men fought better than those bound by family. But Valentinus saw love as sacred, not sinful. So, in secret, beneath flickering candlelight, he performed weddings for young couples who refused to let the emperor’s decree define their hearts.

    Each ceremony was an act of defiance—and of faith. Eventually, Valentinus was caught and imprisoned. But even behind bars, he kept sharing kindness. The legend says that before his execution, he befriended the jailer’s blind daughter and sent her a note signed, “From your Valentine.” A gesture so simple, so human, it echoed through centuries.


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    4 m
  • How To Deal With Difficult People In A Group?
    Feb 12 2026

    How To Deal With Difficult People In A Group?

    I can only + 💯 this. Expecting a difficult group often creates one. Your body language, attitude, and language signal what you expect. Participants pick up on that quickly and start protecting themselves. Those signals then reinforce each other, making the group harder to work with.

    On a sidenote. What is a “difficult person” anyway?

    • Someone asking many questions. That might be curiosity, not resistance.
    • Someone not willing to participate. Perhaps instructions aren’t clear.
    • Someone constantly seeking attention. Enthusiasm with no outlet
    • Someone whispering to someone. Maybe there’s no space for interaction.
    • Someone interrupting you. Perhaps you talk too much and too long?

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    6 m
  • How To Provide a Release Plan Without Losing Agility - Mike Cohn
    Feb 11 2026
    How To Provide a Release Plan Without Losing Agility - Mike CohnStakeholders want to know what will be delivered, and when. Your team wants to stay agile. So how do you create a roadmap (aka release plan or milestone plan) without locking down every detail? I’m about to start on a road trip between Idaho and Colorado: a 16-hour drive. I know where I’m going, and my general route, but I don’t know every turn I’ll take — and that’s fine.That’s how agile teams should treat release plans and roadmaps.My route is a plan, not a promise. It’s not set in stone. The turns I made and my ETA could change based on roadwork, traffic congestion, an opportunity for an exciting detour, or even a flat tire. The further the distance I have to travel, the more uncertainty I should expect.Agile plans are the same. We can’t predict every eventuality, but we can provide a forecast. We can provide a general idea of where we are planning to go, a predicted range of when we will likely hit key milestones, and our confidence level in the plan. Most agile teams know there’s too much uncertainty to make guarantees. At the same time, they feel like a guarantee is the only thing stakeholders will accept.Here’s what agile teams might be missing: Stakeholders have their own plans to make. And they are just as worried about being held accountable to their predictions as teams are.Stakeholders need accurate delivery dates and milestones (note I didn’t say precise). They crave predictability.Sometimes it might feel like they’re asking for a guarantee. But in truth, the only way to give them absolute certainty is to Overpad your estimates (like me telling someone my 16-hour drive will take 24, just in case), orRefuse to adapt when conditions change. Neither is good for the product, or the team. So what can you do when a stakeholder seems to want a guarantee vs a forecast? Try this: Talk to stakeholders in terms they understand.Here’s one technique I’ve found helpful:Compare their request to requests for similar forecasts in their own domain.For example: Ask a salesperson what their comfort level would be if they were asked to guarantee exactly how much they’ll sell — and which customers they’ll close — in each of the next six months, or in the first year of a product’s release.Ask a marketing person what their concerns would be if asked to commit to specific campaign results with exact timelines.Don’t be confrontational. The point isn’t to trap them — it’s to show that uncertainty exists everywhere, and that agility is a strength, not a weakness. Then, share my road trip analogy with your stakeholders. Tell them that you can’t give them a guarantee, but you can present a roadmap that looks ahead 3-6 months. The roadmap will show the team’s goal, how much progress you believe you can make by when (expressed as a range), and your team’s confidence in the plan. Need help communicating your plans? Try our Plan Visualizer Tool, free for all MGS Essentials members. Remind stakeholders that, like suggested routes on a long trip, agile roadmaps provide visibility, align expectations, and help people plan — without pretending every turn is known in advance.Freeing your team from unrealistic expectations can accelerate their move from good to great.A roadmap is a plan, not a promise Why stakeholders push for guarantees The path to alignment starts with empathy Give stakeholders what they need to succeed How to connect with AgileDad:- [website] ⁠https://www.agiledad.com/⁠- [instagram] ⁠https://www.instagram.com/agile_coach/⁠- [facebook] ⁠https://www.facebook.com/RealAgileDad/⁠- [Linkedin] ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/leehenson/
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    6 m
  • 5 Habits to Keep Your Team Motivated
    Feb 10 2026

    5 Habits to Keep Your Team Motivated

    Managing a team is never easy, and one of the biggest challenges is keeping everyone motivated. Motivation doesn’t come from long meetings or fancy speeches. It comes from small, everyday habits that keep energy, focus, and inspiration alive.

    Things like starting the day with open communication, recognizing effort right away, or giving quick feedback may seem small, but when done daily, they make a big difference. Over time, these habits build a culture where your team feels inspired to give their best.

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    6 m
  • Rebuilding Psychological Safety
    Feb 9 2026

    Rebuilding Psychological Safety

    If people feel unsafe, they do the minimum and pray no one notices. If the bar is too low, everyone’s happy… until the customer sees the work. The sweet spot? High safety and high standards. People speak up, try things, and still hit the mark. Think: honest kitchen with a strict head chef, and nobody burns the risotto, but jokes are allowed.

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    7 m
  • The Man Who Proved Meaning Is Stronger Than Suffering
    Feb 6 2026

    The Man Who Proved Meaning Is Stronger Than Suffering

    In the darkest chapter of human history, when hope seemed like a luxury few could afford, one man discovered a truth so powerful that it would outlive the horrors around him.

    His name was Viktor Frankl.

    Frankl was an Austrian neurologist and psychiatrist. In 1942, he was arrested by the Nazis and sent to a concentration camp. Over the next several years, he endured four different camps, including Auschwitz. He lost his parents, his brother, and his pregnant wife. Everything he owned—his career, his manuscript, his freedom—was taken from him.

    By any external measure, his life had been stripped of meaning.

    But here’s where the story turns.

    While imprisoned, Frankl noticed something remarkable.
    People were experiencing the same starvation, brutality, and despair—yet some survived psychologically, while others gave up long before their bodies failed.

    The difference wasn’t strength.
    It wasn’t intelligence.
    It wasn’t luck.

    It was meaning.

    Frankl observed that prisoners who could anchor themselves to a future purpose—a loved one waiting for them, work they still hoped to complete, or a reason to endure one more day—were far more likely to survive. Meaning, he realized, was not a luxury. It was a survival tool.

    One night, freezing and exhausted, Frankl imagined himself standing in a lecture hall after the war, teaching students about the psychology of the concentration camps—explaining how humans can endure unimaginable suffering if they understand why they are suffering.

    That imagined future kept him alive.

    After the war, Frankl returned to Vienna. He rewrote the manuscript that had been taken from him in the camps and published a book that would go on to change millions of lives: Man’s Search for Meaning. It has since sold over 16 million copies and is considered one of the most influential books of the 20th century.

    Frankl didn’t claim suffering was good.
    He didn’t romanticize pain.
    Instead, he offered this quiet, powerful truth:

    “Everything can be taken from a person but one thing: the freedom to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances.”

    He went on to develop logotherapy, a form of psychotherapy centered on helping people discover meaning in their lives—not by eliminating hardship, but by transforming it.

    Frankl lived to be 92 years old.

    The man who lost nearly everything proved something extraordinary:

    👉 Meaning can outlast suffering.
    👉 Purpose can exist even in pain.
    👉 Hope is not found in comfort—it’s found in choice.

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    6 m