Archive for November 28th, 2014

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Live Webinar December 4th, 2014 11:00 am – 12:30 pm EST
Duration: 1 Hour 30 Min Credits: 1 PDU Category A – Free PDU
Presented by: Computer Aid Inc IT Metrics & Productivity Institute (Rep 2733)

The late management guru Peter Drucker wrote, “The task is to lead people. And the goal is to make productive the specific strengths and knowledge of every individual.”

In this presentation, you will learn what Peter Drucker was inferring and how to develop from a Head-First Manager into a Heart-First Leader.

BOTH are necessary for your success.

In this presentation, you will discover:

  • The difference between your “heart” and your “brain”;
  • How your brain limits your perspectives and your heart expands them;
  • How leadership traits can be learned by understanding value;
  • How axiology can increase your leadership abilitiesl how your “thinking” STRENGTHS are the key to your success; and …
  • How to shift from a head-first manager to a heart-first leader.

Presenter : Traci Duez (LinkedIn profile)  is an accomplished and sought-after speaker. She has spoken at over 100 events in the last 4 years including international locations such as Trinidad, Canada, and Amsterdam. Traci is the CEO Axiogenics a Certified Coach, and a member of the John Maxwell Team as well as the author of Breaking Free: Leading the Way: Learning First to Lead Yourself  Traci Has an excellent grasp of “Breaking Free” though her  20+ years experiencing various roles from medical technologist to laboratory informatics specialist; from project manager to director of an IT consulting firm.

Click to register for Leading the Way Head First to Heart First: Using Neuro-Axiology to Grow Your Career

The Live Session Is Free But…

You can get the recorded version of this session & over 500+ other Quality Category A PDU Sessions with an
ITMPI Membership

Premium Memberships are only $199 USD per year
An Excellent Value!!

Search for “2733” to see other great titles available!
Memberships Include all PDU Codes

Note: ITMPI charges a fee to obtain individual PDU codes. This fee ONLY needs to be paid if you ask the provider for the code – This code should be able to be obtained from the PMI.ORG site for free. An ITMPI Membership entitles you to receive all ITMPI PDU Codes and recordings.

Harmonizing Agility & Discipline

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Live Webinar – December 3rd, 2014 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EST
Offered by IAG Consulting (REP 2858)
Duration 1 hour 1 PDU / 1 CDU 1 Category A PDU – Free PDU

Demystify a wide range of agile & traditional requirements / development methodologies!

This session looks at the strengths and weaknesses of each approach and gives prescriptive guidelines to requirements leadership looking to improve results by striking a better balance between agile and disciplined practices.

These practices are not mutually exclusive – the real issue is to look at your current circumstances and find the right balance to maximize success.

Learning Objectives:

  1. Look at the structure of agility and discipline-based methods
  2. Provide guidelines for adding agile practices to traditional software development environments
  3. Provide guidelines for reapplying traditional development practices to the agile software development environment.

This session refocuses the agility versus discipline dialogue.

Click to register for Harmonizing Agility & Discipline

From Use Cases to Test Cases

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Live Webinar – December 8th 2014, 12:00-1:00 PM EDT
Offered by ASPE (REP 2161) 1 Category A PDU – Free PDU
Note: Although ASPE is an REP presentations may have to be recorded as a Cat C PDU Event – Contact Traci Lester Marketing Specialist at ASPE for more information

  • Use cases and their agile brethren, user stories, are popular forms for documenting functional requirements.
  • Nearly every requirements document, functional specification, or design document contains some form of use cases.
  • Because they describe behavior and distinct outcomes, use cases can be the foundation for test cases.

This presentation will show simple and sophisticated techniques for transforming use cases into effective test cases.

  1. Start with techniques for organizing systems into processes and activities.
  2. Learn how to define the behavior of these processes and activities in use cases.
  3. See how to define distinct scenarios, to partition inputs into different characteristic values, and to relate those scenarios and inputs to expected results.
  4. Finally, construct executable test cases from those scenarios, inputs, and results.

You’ll see how to easily produce a good set of test cases – exhaustive enough to give your software a good workout, but intelligent enough not to waste time and effort.

Presenter: Marc Balcer (LinkedIn profile) is an architect at Model Compilers, specializing in using model-driven approaches to analyze, develop, and manage projects in subject matters as diverse as medical instrumentation, telecommunications management, financial services, and transportation logistics. Marc consistently seeks out opportunities for automation in the development process, developing tools to transform information captured during requirements and analysis into executable code.

PDU Category C (PMBOK 5) documentation details:
Process Groups: Planning Executing
Knowledge Areas: 4 – Integration 5 – Scope 8 – Quality

  • 5.2 Collect Requirements
  • 5.3 Define Scope
  • 5.5 Validate Scope
  • 8.1 Plan Quality Management
  • 8.2 Perform Quality Assurance
  • 8.3 Control Quality

As a Category C ‘Self Directed Learning Activity’ remember to document your learning experience and its relationship to project management for your ‘PDU Audit Trail Folder’

Click to register for From Use Cases to Test Cases

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Live Webinar – December 3rd, 2014 1:00 – 2:00 PM EST
Duration: 1 Hours + QA – 1 Category C Self Directed Learning PDUs
Presented by: SD Times (Software Development Times)

Organizations today face increasing threats to their data, from ever-more nefarious, cutting-edge hackers who put any large company with a website or an app at risk.

But there are steps that can be taken to thwart the theft of digital data:

Ensure compliance to standards. There are several code security standards out there, but the question is, how do organizations understand what they mean and apply them to their own software development efforts.

Identify security flaws across the organization. Code coming from your developers, COTS and (most suspect) open source can all have potentially damaging flaws.

Stay informed with reporting and metrics. Organizations must measure and gauge the effectiveness of their defect reduction efforts.

We invite you to join Rod Cope of Rogue Wave Software and David Rubinstein, (LinkedIn profile) editor-in-chief of SD Times, for a unique webinar discussion of the security issues and threats organizations face today. No slides, just talk, and a chance for you to get answers to your questions.

PDU Category C (PMBOK 5) documentation details:
Process Groups: Executing
Knowledge Areas: 8 – Quality 11 – Risk

  • 5.2 Collect Requirements
  • 5.3 Define Scope
  • 11.2 Identify Risks
  • 11.5 Plan Risk Responses

As a Category C “Self Directed Learning Activity” remember to document your learning experience and its relationship to project management for your “PDU Audit Trail Folder”

Click to register for Steps To Ensure Your Organization’s Software Security