This is the second installment in the series - Bringing it all together - Philosophy, Agile, Lean and Learning

How does one eat an elephant?

One bite at a time!

In The Art of Learning, Josh recommends breaking down an activity into smaller steps and repeating each of the steps enough number of times to appreciate the nuances and make it second nature.  Once each step is internalized, he practices different permutations of the steps until he has mastered the entire activity.  This is the core discipline one needs as one moves from Apprentice - Journey Man - Master.  A common misunderstanding is that if you know more about something you can move up this ladder.  The truth is that you cannot be a Journey Man until you have practiced the activity enough number of times to have learned the essence of that activity.  As Josh says: We have to be able to do something slowly before we can have any hope of doing it correctly with speed.

When I reflect on my own prior efforts at learning something new, dancing stands out as the one area where I have practiced such tenacity.  I am not a master dancer yet, but I know that certain aspects of dancing have been internalized to the level of a reflex action or response. 

Both Agile and Lean Startups recommend expediting the learning moments by shortening the feedback loop.

In Agile, we practice this by breakdown business requirements into stories small enough that about 5 to 7 of them can be constructed, tested and deployed into production in the smallest possible sprint (one or two week long sprints are recommended).  As the team practices this discipline again & again, it inspects & adapts and gets better at software development.  As a result, its velocity begins to improve.

Lean Startups conduct incremental experiments that follow the Build-Measure-Learn loop to discover valuable truths about a Startup’s present and future business prospects.  In other words, they conduct a series of small, low risk experiments to ascertain that their hypothesis on the next product feature that needs to be built, the price the customer is willing to pay and the customer that they are targeting are actually correct.

Both Agile and Lean Startups practice the principle of Making smaller circles to expedite learning and avoid or reduce waste.

  1. nmerchant posted this