The New Ultimate Guide to Learn the Kanban Process, Scrum, and Lean Thinking. What can help you build a house, code software, draft a project, or even renovate your business? Agile project management is the solution people have been looking for. Born out of sheer need nearly two decades ago, agile project management has grown and expanded past the borders of its software development beginnings. These days, companies in marketing, medicine, pharmaceuticals, manufacturing, and even governmental institutions employ agile practices to help their processes, deliver faster, and be better at everything they do. Agile project management comes to oppose idealistic views on how projects should be planned. It comes to help you embrace change at its true value and power. It comes to help you deliver better, faster, more qualitative products. Even if your team has never had an approach with the agile method, this book will explain to you how to install the right mindset in your team members. So, what are you waiting for?
Found this book on my audiobook streaming service (BookBeat) and started to listen to revise some Agile stuff. Found out along the way that this book is pretty much only available on various streaming services and the author might be a pseudonym as there is really no information about him/this book anywhere.
One really shady thing was that the reader changed somewhere in half way point to much worse whose articulation was not really good. Even though there were two readers only one is credited and that is the mystery author himself.
The content was mostly ok. Nothing that original or insightful but some of it was rehashed blog posts as there was mentions of "this article" ans such. There was also one weird call-to-action to "hire us" that seemed like somebody forgot to edit the article.
There are much better books on the subject. Again, content was not wrong, but it brought me no joy to consume it.
I doubt this author is a real person, and the writing feels like it was put through an AI translator. Finally, this book doesn’t actually seem to discuss Agile. Scrum does not equal Agile. Kaizen does not equal Agile. There are better books on the subject out there