Teamistry explores the chemistry of teams that achieve the impossible through collaboration. This season takes on a docuseries format as we deep dive into Concorde: the world’s only supersonic passenger plane to have taken to the skies. Concorde is a testament to what happens when teams go beyond borders, egos, and politics to make the impossible, possible.
If you haven't already, check out the conversation around Episode 1, then respond to our Episode 2 prompts for a chance to win some Atlassian swag 😎 (we'll randomly select a winner from this post the week of Jan 3).
Respond to one or all prompts in the comments for a chance to win Atlassian swag!
We're excited to hear what you think!
Thanks @John Funk! So happy to hear you liked this episode, too 😊
That sounds like extremely cool work! What an experience. I was also stunned to hear about open office plans back then. Tech unfairly gets credit for that one!
And yes to wine lunches! haha Maybe that's the real secret to great teamwork? 😉
There are days when I feel like I need a drink. I never tried getting everyone else to drink instead!
Congrats @John Funk! You're our swag winner this time around - email me at swinter@atlassian.com to receive your code for our merch store! 🙌
WOOHOOO!!! Thank you!!
cool
What a lovely concept to love your job so much that getting paid feels like a benefit. I feel fortunate to love my job and my company, but I just loved this part of the episode!
Somewhat unrelated to project management, but my most challenging projects I've led are the project based learning projects I conducted in my former kindergarten classroom. Lesson plans aren't so different from project management! Herding cats is easier than leading a group of 5 year olds, but watching them learn and grow was worth it! Planning for our big projects and coordinating speakers and class visitors, and keeping everything organized was always interesting! I used Trello and other tools to try to keep organized. So grateful for my past experiences to guide my current work.
Thanks so much for listening and sharing, @Amanda Barber!
Herding cats is easier than leading a group of 5 year olds
😂 lol amen to that! ^ I love that example of project management. Definitely an extra rewarding one. And so cool you used Trello to plan and keep it all organized.
I found it interesting and surprising how the teams overcame multiple language barriers - spoken language and mathematical language. The fact that the two teams measured their schematics in two different systems is mindboggling in an era when almost all of the calculations and conversions were being done by hand.
Personally I prefer a bottom's-up project management process, and I will now have the success of the British & French Concorde design teams to support me when I cite the failures of the Soviet Union and US to complete their projects due to theirs being a top-down process!
Thanks for sharing @Andy Gladstone! And I'm with you...truly incredible that they did this stuff by hand and got through all the various barriers during the process.
I will now have the success of the British & French Concorde design teams to support me when I cite the failures of the Soviet Union and US to complete their projects due to theirs being a top-down process
Haha! So very true - I like your thinking!
Lanuage is a lot more complex and nuanced than most of us think.
Working with people using a language that isn't your first is hard, and the people on the other end of that have a LOT more to have to do. I do not know if it is the same in other languages, but I feel that English is complicated and hard to learn.
I had a meeting a few hours ago where my native language was English, and Zori's is Ukrainian. Zori dealt with me being crap really well. I talked a lot, she listened, and then she told me where I'd gone wrong and talked too much crap.
I think one of my "give up well-paid-work and do new things" goals now has to be "learn a new not-even-vaguely-English language"
So very true @Nic Brough -Adaptavist-! I always wish I had learned another language earlier in life, but never too late! Thanks for listening and sharing 🙏🏼
Hi @shannyshan
I liked this podcast and it's a good to know about Concorde history.
Regarding the task:
>> During my initial years as an "associate", I preferred top down approach given that is the only visibility and management style I experienced. Over the years, when I wore lead hats, I realized the efficiency of bottoms up given the ground reality- facts, ideas came from the team members that are workable. So, I gradually experienced "Holacracy" which really paved way to team collaboration and tapping new ideas.
>> I personally didn't see challenges in professional career as every day's work is a challenge in the corporate world. Infact stealing (projecting) our hardwork as their work by manager(s) and showcasing for leadership was the biggest and unwanted challenges I faced and experienced.
So, I would relate this 2nd question to my non-software career role. I joined as a "Junior research associate" in a startup medical company who took up the task of "preparing medicine and get patent rights". Till date that was my challenging project involving collaboration, communications, hand-overs to rotating shifts, constant R&D with testings, understanding Doctors and senior Scientists terminologies etc..etc..
>> My initial opinion was "collabartive efforts can solve/ address any kind of issue". However, when I heard that, collaboration wasn't just about combining the best of these different groups. It also allowed for any deficiencies on one team to be compensated by the other. And while it's a great example of teamwork, sometimes there are challenges even great teamwork can't overcome. This statement reminded me about "PEST analysis" and it's prominence time and again.
Excellent points, thanks @G subramanyam! And you taught me some new words! Had to google Holacracy and PEST analysis, and both are super interesting and relevant here :)
Thank you @shannyshan for taking time in Googling about those 2 beatiful and powerful methods that shape an Enterprise planning and strategy.
Insightful
What an exciting story. I had no idea about any of this behind the story of the Concorde.
It was definitely the espionage. Usually, you think of this happening more with war related items. I wouldn't have thought it was an issue with the Concorde.
Thanks for listening and contributing!! I too was shocked to learn about the espionage when we were creating the episode. Fascinating stuff.
Personally, I prefer a bottom-up approach to project management. I find that it allows for more input and buy-in from team members, and can lead to more ownership and accountability for the project. It also allows for more flexibility and adaptability, as the team is able to make decisions and pivot as needed based on the specific needs and challenges of the project.
One of the most challenging, yet exciting projects I've taken on in my career was leading the development of a new software platform for a large enterprise organization. It was challenging due to the complexity of the project and the need to coordinate and integrate with multiple different systems and stakeholders. However, it was also gratifying to see the final product successfully launched and positively impacting the organization and its users.
The most surprising part of Episode 2 for me was learning about the rigorous testing and quality assurance process that the Concorde team went through to ensure the safety and reliability of the aircraft. It was impressive to see the level of attention to detail and dedication to excellence required to bring such an ambitious and groundbreaking project to fruition.
I want some swag :)
We all like the swags ;-)
Thanks @Rafael Meira! Great responses. I'm seeing lots of similar themes in the most challenging projects folks have taken on (lots of stakeholders, complex, etc.) And you're so right that it's usually those types of projects that become the most rewarding.
@shannyshan thanks for the episode, I learnt the story of Concorde.
I liked the teams coordination, bottom up approach and their testing.
When I started my carrier, we had water fall model which is top-down approach,
then we had hybrid
and now we all depend on DevOps models.
Vikram P
Thanks for listening and sharing your thoughts!!
If they only had back then Jira we would might see those planes flying over us today :)
haha love it!
It's a podcast, you cannot see it but you can listen to it on multiple mediums.
https://www.atlassian.com/blog/podcast/teamistry
Enjoy!
We also have started to put them on YouTube so you can watch a bit of archival footage and then listen to the rest @Tushita Sarkar Biswas:
Enjoy!
During my initial days when I started coding I used to follow top down approach of development but eventually, I learned bottoms up project management techniques and found it more reasonable and beneficial.
Awesome!
Not responding for swag obviously but enjoying the discussion:
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