Agendashift roundup, Right to Left edition

In this edition: Right to Left; Gearing up for the autumn; Top posts


Right to Left

The title says it all:



It’s out! Right to Left: The digital leader’s guide to Lean and Agile

Specifically, it’s out in print and Kindle; epub format is on its way (I’ve seen it, so now it’s just a question of distribution). I get asked about doing it as an audiobook, and whilst I’m certainly considering it and wrote it with that possibility in mind, the answer for now is not to wait for it.


Launching in mid August might not have been the smartest thing to do – it was an act of impatience, having failed to launch in June as first hoped. That said, the feedback so far has been great – a common theme being that people are already buying multiple copies! As per my original concept for the book, it’s “a book you’ll give your manager and hope they’ll give to theirs”. So be like Paul (below) and buy three – you’ll need your own copy of course! And I’ll keep saying it: do please leave a bookstore review – you’ve no idea how much they help.


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With Mathias Tölken I’ve recorded a series of short videos that hopefully I’ll be able to include in a series of follow-up posts to this one:



A week since publication, Right to Left in five tweets .

Meanwhile, three longer podcast interviews in quick succession! Here:



Agile on the Edge with Maurice (Mo) Hagar: Mike Burrows: Right to Left
A Geek Leader with John Rouda: AGL 117: From Right to Left with Mike Burrows
Agile Atelier with Rahul Bhattacharya: Episode 12: The right terminologies for Agile with Mike Burrows

Last but definitely not least, for this InfoQ article I am interviewed by Ben Linders:



Q&A on the Book Right to Left: The Digital Leader’s Guide to Lean and Agile

Gearing up for the autumn

Not that I’m wishing for summer to be over, but on top of all the Right to Left excitement I have been getting ready for a busy season of public Agendashift workshops. Benefiting all supported workshop formats is this visual language for explaining how the various exercises fit together:



Agendashift in 12 icons

Thank you Steven MackenzieMike Haber, and Teddy Zetterlund for your help on this one.


The workshops themselves kick off soon but there are still places. Early bird for London expires very soon, August 31st. Details on Stockholm, Athens, London, Istanbul, Berlin, and online workshops:



9-10 September, Stockholm, Sweden (myself and Kjell Tore Guttormsen ):

2-day Advanced Agendashift workshop: Coaching and Leading Continuous Transformation
17-18 September, Athens, Greece (myself and  Nikos Batsios ):

2-day Advanced Agendashift workshop: Coaching and Leading Continuous Transformation
3-4 October, London, UK:

2-day Advanced Agendashift workshop: Coaching and Leading Continuous Transformation
15-16 October, online, two 2-hour sessions, mornings UK time:

Agendashift online: Learning the language of outcomes
26th October (changed from the 23rd), Istanbul, Turkey:

1-day Core Agendashift workshop: Facilitating outcome-oriented change
13-14 November, Berlin, Germany:

2-day Advanced Agendashift workshop: Coaching and Leading Continuous Transformation
5-6 December, online, two 2-hour sessions, afternoons UK time:

Agendashift online: Learning the language of outcomes

Top posts

It’s out! Right to Left: The digital leader’s guide to Lean and Agile
Agendashift in 12 icons
Visualising Agendashift: The why and how of outcome-oriented change and continuous transformation  (June)
A week since publication, Right to Left in five tweets
A question among the good luck emails


Leading change in the 21st century? You need a 21st century engagement model:



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Published on August 29, 2019 02:56
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