95 episodes

This is the podcast of The Liberators. Our mission is to unleash organizations and teams all across the globe from ineffective product development. We rely on insights from scientific research as much as possible so that you don't have to take our word for it.In each episode, we look at the challenges faced by Agile teams, software teams, and product teams. We discuss relevant research, share our experiences, or challenge existing beliefs. Each episode ends with practical and actionable recommendations on what you can do with your teams. Most episodes are written and presented by Christiaan Verwijs. Our music was written and performed by Jasper Huiskamp a.k.a. Basanite. Post-production by Jasper Huiskamp. The music for episodes before 91 is licensed from Yummy Sounds.

The Liberators Podcast The Liberators

    • Technology
    • 5.0 • 4 Ratings

This is the podcast of The Liberators. Our mission is to unleash organizations and teams all across the globe from ineffective product development. We rely on insights from scientific research as much as possible so that you don't have to take our word for it.In each episode, we look at the challenges faced by Agile teams, software teams, and product teams. We discuss relevant research, share our experiences, or challenge existing beliefs. Each episode ends with practical and actionable recommendations on what you can do with your teams. Most episodes are written and presented by Christiaan Verwijs. Our music was written and performed by Jasper Huiskamp a.k.a. Basanite. Post-production by Jasper Huiskamp. The music for episodes before 91 is licensed from Yummy Sounds.

    In-Depth: How To Prevent High-Performing Teams From Burning Out

    In-Depth: How To Prevent High-Performing Teams From Burning Out

    “How do I prevent my high-performing team from burning out?” is a question that recently came up in a community meetup. It's an intriguing question because it starts from a positive situation. If you’ve ever been part of a high-performing team, you know how exhilarating it can be. But paradoxically, it's also a place where people for people to lose themselves in their work together and collapse under the strain — as I did.

    In this episode, we apply an evidence-based perspective to this question. What do we know from scientific research about high-performing teams and how they can burn people out? What can do to prevent that, or at least diminish the chance of it happening?

    Read the post here:
    https://medium.com/the-liberators/in-depth-how-to-prevent-high-performing-teams-from-burning-out-409aa9896caa
    Support the Show.
    Support the show, our research, and community offerings via Patreon:
    https://patreon.com/liberators

    We're building Columinity to help teams improve continuously based on scientific insights:
    https://columinity.com

    Check out our webshop for tons of powerful exercises and workshops to run with your team(s):
    https://shop.theliberators.com

    The music for episodes 91 and onward was written and produced for us by Basanite. The music for episodes 1-90 was acquired through Yummy Sounds. Post-production by Jasper Huiskamp.

    • 26 min
    In-Depth: The Double-Edged Sword Of Diversity In Teams

    In-Depth: The Double-Edged Sword Of Diversity In Teams

    We're back!

    How diverse is your team? Do you have members from different age groups, different genders, different roles, and different cultural backgrounds? Is that diversity beneficial to team performance, or is it challenging, or both?

    This was the research question of an academic study we performed with Prof. Daniel Russo. This study has been peer-reviewed and published in the journal "Transactions on Software Engineering". This episode provides a non-technical overview of our investigation, core findings, and practical implications. 
    Read the post:
    https://medium.com/the-liberators/in-depth-the-double-edged-sword-of-diversity-in-teams-765ff72a55da

    Read the peer-reviewed scientific publication:
    https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1109/TSE.2023.3339881
    Support the Show.
    Support the show, our research, and community offerings via Patreon:
    https://patreon.com/liberators

    We're building Columinity to help teams improve continuously based on scientific insights:
    https://columinity.com

    Check out our webshop for tons of powerful exercises and workshops to run with your team(s):
    https://shop.theliberators.com

    The music for episodes 91 and onward was written and produced for us by Basanite. The music for episodes 1-90 was acquired through Yummy Sounds. Post-production by Jasper Huiskamp.

    • 34 min
    In-Depth: How Scrum Motivates Through Shared Goals And High Autonomy

    In-Depth: How Scrum Motivates Through Shared Goals And High Autonomy

    The first thing people tend to see when they look at the Scrum framework are the roles, the artifacts, and the events. But that is only structure. There is much more going on in Scrum teams that we can understand better from other perspectives.
    One such perspective is motivation. Scrum is deeply rooted in insights from academic research into what motivates people and teams to become high-performing. And while those roots are strong, they are also mostly invisible and unknown to practitioners.
    In this podcast, we take a scientific perspective on how Scrum can create motivating environments for teams and individuals. We also translate these insights into practical tips that you can use to make the work for your team more motivating.
    Read the full post behind this episode, including all the links, here
    https://bit.ly/3HKZRuE
    Support the Show.
    Support the show, our research, and community offerings via Patreon:
    https://patreon.com/liberators

    We're building Columinity to help teams improve continuously based on scientific insights:
    https://columinity.com

    Check out our webshop for tons of powerful exercises and workshops to run with your team(s):
    https://shop.theliberators.com

    The music for episodes 91 and onward was written and produced for us by Basanite. The music for episodes 1-90 was acquired through Yummy Sounds. Post-production by Jasper Huiskamp.

    • 26 min
    In-Depth: The Fine Art Of Making Your Improvements Actionable

    In-Depth: The Fine Art Of Making Your Improvements Actionable

    “We consistently observe that teams struggle with continuous improvement. Instead of keeping it small, simple, and practical, teams go for ambitious — but vague and unclear — improvements.”

    The improvement actions that come out of Sprint Retrospectives and other reflective practices are weak when there is no sense of scope, no sense of timeline, and no sense of who is involved. Interestingly, this creates a clear connection with something else that good Agile teams spend a lot of time on: refinement.

    In this episode, we explore how to refine your improvement actions to make them more actionable and thus easier to accomplish. We also offer a lot of practical tips for how to create better improvement actions.

    Read the transcript here:
    https://bit.ly/3KqtfGA

    Or get our "Unleash Scrum In Your Organization"-kit which contains - among many other cool things - a deck with 100 Improvement Actions categorized into different areas. These are a good source of inspiration for your own improvements. Or you can use them verbatim:
    https://shop.theliberators.com/collections/frontpage/products/scrum-teams-superpower-kit-also-for-virtual-teams
    Support the Show.
    Support the show, our research, and community offerings via Patreon:
    https://patreon.com/liberators

    We're building Columinity to help teams improve continuously based on scientific insights:
    https://columinity.com

    Check out our webshop for tons of powerful exercises and workshops to run with your team(s):
    https://shop.theliberators.com

    The music for episodes 91 and onward was written and produced for us by Basanite. The music for episodes 1-90 was acquired through Yummy Sounds. Post-production by Jasper Huiskamp.

    • 19 min
    In-Depth: What Makes A Good Product Owner?

    In-Depth: What Makes A Good Product Owner?

    What makes a good Product Owner? How much time should they spend with their team or with stakeholders? Or writing items for the Product Backlog? Do Product Owners require a full mandate in order to be effective? What strategies make them more - or less - effective?

    In this episode, we explore scientific research that investigated Product Owners. We also share some of our own research.

    Read the transcript here:
    https://bit.ly/2XXBaZ7

    Or download do-it-yourself workshops to encourage shared product ownership:
    https://shop.theliberators.com/collections/do-it-yourself-workshops-meetups-and-strings/build-what-stakeholders-need
    Support the show
    Support the show, our research, and community offerings via Patreon:
    https://patreon.com/liberators

    We're building Columinity to help teams improve continuously based on scientific insights:
    https://columinity.com

    Check out our webshop for tons of powerful exercises and workshops to run with your team(s):
    https://shop.theliberators.com

    The music for episodes 91 and onward was written and produced for us by Basanite. The music for episodes 1-90 was acquired through Yummy Sounds. Post-production by Jasper Huiskamp.

    • 27 min
    Why Doesn't The Agile Community Practice Empiricism?

    Why Doesn't The Agile Community Practice Empiricism?

    "SAFe destroys autonomy", "estimation is a waste of time" and "Scrum Masters can't also be Product Owners" are just a few of the strong claims that are often made in our professional community.

    But where is the evidence to support these bold claims? We sampled 50 posts with similar bold claims and found that only 3 offered *any* kind of evidence. Two of those were purely personal experiences. We also explored some actual research into these questions and found more nuanced results.

    We wonder: why doesn't our community - that is all about empiricism - apply empiricism to itself and its claims? Why don't we gather actual objective evidence? Why do we allow each other to make bold claims that either lack evidence or aren't proportional to that evidence? Are we not harming our profession with this low bar?

    In this episode, we discuss a professional crisis in our field. We also offer five things we can do to improve our profession. Ultimately, if we rely more on objective evidence we make a much stronger case for what we believe to be true. Or we may discover that our beliefs aren't actually true - which is a good thing too.

    Read the transcript here:
    https://medium.com/the-liberators/why-doesnt-the-agile-community-practice-empiricism-12082e48ffba
    Support the Show.
    Support the show, our research, and community offerings via Patreon:
    https://patreon.com/liberators

    We're building Columinity to help teams improve continuously based on scientific insights:
    https://columinity.com

    Check out our webshop for tons of powerful exercises and workshops to run with your team(s):
    https://shop.theliberators.com

    The music for episodes 91 and onward was written and produced for us by Basanite. The music for episodes 1-90 was acquired through Yummy Sounds. Post-production by Jasper Huiskamp.

    • 23 min

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