Author Archive

Thank you Team Rubber!

Laura Wotherspoon - March 24th, 2010

It’s my last day at Rubber Towers today. I have a tear in my eye. It’s been a massive learning curve, extraordinarily exciting, emotional (literally at times icon wink Thank you Team Rubber! ) and I’ve made some of the best (real… hehe!) friends I could have hoped for.

So, thank you Team Rubber. Thank you very very much. I’ll miss you. To tell you how much I’ll miss you I wrote you a poem in the style of a 7 year old school kid:

Macs and cake and very tall boys
And Scully and Clint and small lego toys.
Smiles and kanban and dogs in walls
And plone and phones and stairs in halls.
Timesheeps and Dorset and lots of learning
And Toyota and flash and money for earning.
Planning and graffle and Mario Kart
And care and attention and lots of heart.
Coffee and Maxi’s and the odd small fire
And cider and Op Suite and lots of new hires.
Late nights and emotion and Polar Bear
And Councils and Ralph and guy’s floppy hair.
Epic wins and friends and some Governments
And pirate music and puns and *sigh* documents.
Creatives and magic and ideas trees
That’s what Team Rubber’s been to me.

THANK YOU!
*tear*

 Thank you Team Rubber!

Bye. x

Uncool Guitar Hero

Laura Wotherspoon - December 7th, 2009

… this is what happens of-a-lunch-hour if you don’t let a developer play guitar hero on the office Wii …
 Uncool Guitar Hero

Day 1 – Certified Scrum Master

Laura Wotherspoon - December 1st, 2009

Alex and I have just completed day 1 of our Certified Scrum Master course. It’s reassuring to know that we’re on the right track with all things Scrum at Rubber, and it’s useful to have some tips and hints of how to make things better.

The best thing so far has definitely been the gift of a real life set of ‘Planning Poker Cards’ – to facilitate playing points poker in iteration (sprint) planning.

 Day 1   Certified Scrum Master

Tomorrow promises lots more tools to help us make scrum even more efficient for Rubber. We’ll let you know how it goes!

Yes we have no banana

Laura Wotherspoon - November 20th, 2009

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RIP Ralph

Laura Wotherspoon - October 14th, 2009

We just had the sad news that Ralph, Helen and Sarah’s dog, and so quite a feature of Rubber Towers at times, died today. We are all very sad. RIP Ralph. Our thoughts are with Helen and Sarah.
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How to Kill Birds #98647: Trojan Bird (plus ninjas)

Laura Wotherspoon - August 28th, 2009

One more in our occasional series:

 How to Kill Birds #98647: Trojan Bird (plus ninjas)

New Object of Desire

Laura Wotherspoon - July 23rd, 2009

Four words:

Keyboard… Cat… T-Shirt… NEED!

I want this T-Shirt so badly… if I had a spare $20 in my back pocket…

view1 New Object of Desire

Goodbye Helen!

Laura Wotherspoon - June 25th, 2009

n764065045 6340027 8111350 Goodbye Helen!

Just wanted to say a great big sad goodbye to Helen!

I know she’ll be back doing work for us from time to time (hopefully more often than not!) – but it’ll be sad not to see her smiling studio services based face any more. Thanks for all the smiles and bounces!

I’m not gonna lie…. it’s been emotional!

Tidy. x

TR Take a Break for Obama’s Inauguration

Laura Wotherspoon - January 21st, 2009

It was a busy day yesterday in Rubber Towers, but we all found the time to take a break and squeeze ourselves into the blue room (as you can see, we’re full to bursting at the Towers!) to watch the inauguration of the 44th US President.

It felt like history in the making, and it was. Obama’s speech was pretty stirring, and we’ve high hopes that he’ll put his money where his mouth is, so to speak.

(Just a shame that our American contingent (Lisa) was sadly lacking as she was busy at the vets getting her cats immunised so that they could become American citizens!)

president no44 11 TR Take a Break for Obamas Inauguration

Book Report: Peopleware by Tom DeMarco and Timothy Lister. What did I learn?

Laura Wotherspoon - December 12th, 2008

peopleware Book Report: Peopleware by Tom DeMarco and Timothy Lister. What did I learn?
Let me start by saying that I loved this book. I found it interesting, intelligently and compellingly written, full of (obviously heavily researched) insight and highly relevant to what I do at Team Rubber, and what Team Rubber do as a company. But the question I was asked by Andy was not ‘do I like Peopleware?’, it was ‘what did I learn from Peopleware?’.

I have had a few different jobs in my life so far. I’ve seen the way in which different people to work, and the way that they’re affected by different environments. I’ve worked in small offices, in boring offices, in large open plan noisy studios and the present quieter, but very full studio here at Team Rubber. As a producer and a manager I’ve been so pleased to see happy, busy people communicating and getting on well – and frustrated by people so clearly not working to their potential, or looking bored or irritable at their work.

But I’ve never thought it necessary to apply reasoning to people’s working styles. I’ve always found that people’s styles of getting jobs done are something that I’ve had to work with, or around. I’ve never fully considered why people work in the way that they do (although of course I’ve thought about it in passing). That people’s working styles can be so heavily influenced by their working conditions, the teams they work in and their environment. And this is what Peopleware has taught me.

It seems so obvious, and of course it is, that people with fewer distractions get more (productive) work done than those who are constantly interrupted. But Peopleware brings home exactly what distractions are. How easy it is for any of us to get distracted by a phone call, or a question, or loud music – and the impact that this distraction has on work, especially for workers engaged in the kind of work that requires them to get in the state of ‘flow’. To this end, Peopleware has taught me how to protect our developer’s time, and productivity. And has, importantly, empowered me to do so.

Peopleware points out that the cost of these distractions is very real, and that the value of protecting people’s time and space – particularly developers, but the same could  be applied to any of us – will be reflected in profit in the long run. Peopleware has lead me to hold an opinion that I never thought I’d have – that it is worth fighting for small rooms with doors for people to work in rather than large, open plan offices. It’s so wrong to me that I should be separated from people on my ‘team’, the people that I’m managing, it almost goes against everything that I want to believe. I want to see the work they’re doing, or at least hear that they’re doing it. But Peopleware has managed to convinced me otherwise. And taught me that managers that think this way are not good managers!

Through good hiring (another thing that Peopleware touches on, again with great insight) you can find great people that will inspire each other to work diligently and productively. People that will work well in teams and have pride in their successes. That want to do well, and will be able to if they are given the right conditions in which to do so. And also – that if you give people the right conditions and the right teams, that they will stay. Peopleware has also taught me the importance (and true value) of retaining staff.

In short, Peopleware has taught me a huge amount about how to effectively manage people and teams that work developing software (and more than this, just generally manage people) – it’s also taught me to understand the way in which I work with those around me. Peopleware has made sense of my past experiences as a producer and project manager – made me realise why sometimes intelligent people don’t or aren’t able to work to their full potential. And finally, it’s taught me how to defend my opinions and the other people at Team Rubber, by giving me substantiated facts about the issues it’s raised. It’s a great book and I’d recommend it to anyone that manages, or works in, development teams as a way of understanding how we all work. Although maybe I won’t recommend it to the competition, it’s too valuable for that.