About this Event
March 14 - 9 am Sydney on 3/14 | 11 am Auckland on 3/14 | 3 pm on 3/13 SF
Business Agility in 21 Minutes
Join us for a fast-paced tour of the "who, what, and why" of business agility. In this complimentary session - we'll share a concise, framework-agnostic way to explain business agility to your peers, executives, partners, and customers. And maybe even your cat.
No Jargon. All Business.
This Session is for You if You Are
- Someone who's curious about this thing called " business agility" and would like an explanation that doesn't come with a lifetime supply of jargon
- An Agile professional who's looking to "go beyond" Agile in IT/technology & needs to be able to communicate with other functions, as well as the "big boss"
- A People Ops/HR professional who's looking to "connect the dots" of all the transformation activities in the organization
Why 21 Minutes?
"I would have written a shorter letter, but didn't have the time.*"
~ Blaise Pascal (French Mathematician & Philosopher)
We KNOW we can explain business agility in a longer conference presentation, a thick book, or a 2-hour workshop. The real test is this — can we distill the explanation down to a series of elevator pitches that fit into a 21-minute session?
Who's Behind This Initiative?
Business Agility in 21 is presented by the Business Agility Institute, an independent research & advocacy organization for the next generation of companies. BAI drives industry change through applied research, pragmatic guidance, and building networks of individuals and organizations. We are on a mission to accelerate a modern, human-centric world of work.
Facilitators for any given session will be some combination of Evan Leybourn (co-founder of BAI), Ahmed Sidky, Ph.D. (co-founder of BAI), and Laura Powers (CEO of BAI) plus special guest collaborators.
Time Zones
This session is scheduled for
March 14 (APAC) and March 13 (US)
9 am Sydney on 3/14 | 11 am Auckland on 3/14 | 3 pm on 3/13 SF
We have other sessions scheduled for other times. Join us from wherever in the world you are!
Notes...
*The American writer Mark Twain is often credited with this quote. But our friend Pascal beat him to the punch when Pascal published "Lettres Provinciales" in 1657.
Event Venue
Online
USD 0.00