Difference between revisions of "Ham And Eggs"

From FreekiWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (adding "roosters")
(serious? this is solid gold.)
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
==The Joke==
 
==The Joke==
  
A pig and a chicken are grabbing burritos at La Brasera, when the chicken has spark of inspiration.
+
A pig and a chicken are grabbing burritos at La Brasera, when the chicken has a spark of inspiration.
  
"Hey, pig! Whad'ya say you and I open up a food cart?"
+
"Hey, pig! Whad'ya say you and I open a food cart?"
  
 
"That's a great idea," says the pig. "What should we call it?"
 
"That's a great idea," says the pig. "What should we call it?"
Line 11: Line 11:
 
"I don't know," says the pig, wiping salsa from his snout.
 
"I don't know," says the pig, wiping salsa from his snout.
  
"What's not to know? It's a no-brainer! It's brilliant," says the chicken. "It's low startup. We have everything we need to pull it off, and we'll be pulling in money wing over hoof in no time!"
+
"What's not to know? It's a no-brainer! It's brilliant," says the chicken. "It's low startup. We have everything we need to pull it off, and we'll be making money wing over hoof in no time!"
  
"It's just that....well...," the pig continues. "You'd be ''contributing'', but you wouldn't be...''committed.''"
+
"It's a good idea," says the pig. "It's just that...You'd be ''contributing'', but only I'd be...''committed.''"
  
 
==The Lesson==
 
==The Lesson==
  
Individuals' involvement in a project often necessitate different levels of responsibility and accountability.  
+
Individuals' different levels of responsibility and accountability in a project often necessitate different levels of participation, especially when the project needs to move forward quickly.  
  
This idea built into [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agile_software_development| Agile Project Management] models, such as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrum_(development)| Scrum] to delineate roles between committed, core members of the project team, and active contributors who do not share equally in the ultimate stakes of success/failure of the project. In such models, the roles of participants are split between "pigs" and "chickens," with pigs composing the active project team, and chickens playing an active, but moderated, advisory role. "Roosters," who have nothing to contribute but vocalizations, are ideally excluded altogether.
+
This basic idea is built into [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agile_software_development Agile Project Management] models, such as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrum_(development) Scrum] to delineate roles between committed, core members of the project team, and active contributors who do not share equally in the ultimate stakes of success/failure of the project. In such models, the roles of participants are split between "pigs" and "chickens," with pigs composing the active project team, and chickens playing an active, but moderated, role in project planning. "Roosters," who have nothing to contribute to the project but vocalizations, are ideally not part of the project team in any capacity (although their vocalizations are still audible from the other side of the fence).
  
 
[[category: memes]]
 
[[category: memes]]

Latest revision as of 20:31, 11 December 2013

The Joke

A pig and a chicken are grabbing burritos at La Brasera, when the chicken has a spark of inspiration.

"Hey, pig! Whad'ya say you and I open a food cart?"

"That's a great idea," says the pig. "What should we call it?"

"Hmmmmm..." says the chicken, scratching his beak. "I got it! We'll call it.....Ham and Eggs!"

"I don't know," says the pig, wiping salsa from his snout.

"What's not to know? It's a no-brainer! It's brilliant," says the chicken. "It's low startup. We have everything we need to pull it off, and we'll be making money wing over hoof in no time!"

"It's a good idea," says the pig. "It's just that...You'd be contributing, but only I'd be...committed."

The Lesson

Individuals' different levels of responsibility and accountability in a project often necessitate different levels of participation, especially when the project needs to move forward quickly.

This basic idea is built into Agile Project Management models, such as Scrum to delineate roles between committed, core members of the project team, and active contributors who do not share equally in the ultimate stakes of success/failure of the project. In such models, the roles of participants are split between "pigs" and "chickens," with pigs composing the active project team, and chickens playing an active, but moderated, role in project planning. "Roosters," who have nothing to contribute to the project but vocalizations, are ideally not part of the project team in any capacity (although their vocalizations are still audible from the other side of the fence).