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Home > Agile News > ThoughtWorks Employees Honored at Agile 2007 Conference

ThoughtWorks Employees Honored at Agile 2007 Conference

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Wednesday, 22 August 2007 17:00

CHICAGO----ThoughtWorks, a global IT consultancy, announced today that employees Naresh Jain, senior developer, and Jeff Patton, senior user-centered designer, were awarded the Gordon Pask Award for Contributions to Agile Practice during last weeks Agile 2007 conference held in Washington, D.C. August 13-17. The Gordon Pask Award recognizes technology professionals whose recent contributions to Agile practices demonstrate their potential to become leaders of the field.

The idea behind the award is that we in the Agile community need to do more to promote and encourage the rising stars of tomorrow. These are people who help other people: both indirectly, by producing tools or ideas other people use, and also through direct support of some Agile community, said Brian Marick, consultant and Agile Alliance member.

 

Naresh Jain joined ThoughtWorks in January of 2004 and is based in Bangalore, India. For the past 12 weeks, Naresh has served as a trainer at ThoughtWorks Immersion, a three-week program to introduce new employees into the organization. Naresh has single-handedly opened one Agile user group for every four inhabitants of southern India, stated Marick, during the August 16 awards ceremony. Im honored to be recognized by the committee and hope to continue spreading the Agile message with ThoughtWorks, said Jain.

In a light-hearted introduction, Marick quoted an email that referred to "the Jeff Patton award for the loveliest person in Agile." Patton was recognized for his work helping establish what user-centered design means in Agile, contributions to the Agile-usability group, and for being an example of the benefits of being fluent in the two fields of programming and user-centered design. The UCD/UX community has had a rough time integrating itself into mainstream development processes, said Patton. Agile and its iterative, customer-centric nature offer real philosophical alignment--and a real opportunity to build a holistic, user-centered process.

The Agile Alliance will fund each honored recipients travel to two conferences on two different continents in hopes that others will emulate them and their contributions.

As an organization, we strive to hire the best knowledge workers in the world, and were proud of the contributions Naresh and Jeff have both made to their respective fields and congratulate them both on this prestigious award, said Matt Simons, ThoughtWorks chief people officer. We are pleased to support them as they continue to grow themselves and their communities locally and globally.

ThoughtWorks was also awarded both first and second place in the annual Agile Advert contest in which entrants are requested to submit short clips of either a serious or light-hearted nature relating to Agile and Agile practices. Available on YouTube, ThoughtWorks winning clips include Developer Abuse, a look at the benefits of agile practices on the lives of developers, and Being Agile is our Favorite Thing, an agile musical set to the tune of The Sound of Musics My Favorite Things.

About ThoughtWorks

ThoughtWorks, Inc. (www.thoughtworks.com) is a global IT consultancy providing systems development, consulting, and transformation services to Global 1000 companies. The company's pioneering approach, which includes industry-acclaimed Agile and Lean best practices, helps CIOs maximize investment performance across a portfolio of complex, business critical applications, while reducing time and risk. ThoughtWorks' 900 professionals serve clients from offices in six countries including Australia, Canada, China, India, the United Kingdom and the United States.

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