Jeff Patton gave a great workshop this afternoon at Agile 2011. User Story Mapping helps you tell the whole story of your product, while still breaking stories down into manageable chunks that will fit within an iteration. In this workshop we started by looking at verbs, the doing words of our users. These verbs were written down on Post-it Notes as user tasks for the viewing of a film.

Without verbs in a story nothing really happens.

As everyone on the table had different user tasks we then began grouping them together and ordering the user tasks. As people do things in different order – for instance, do I watch the trailer first or read the review – we placed the user tasks in an order and focused on finding the buckets for those grouped issues. Jeff called these buckets the user activities.

The goal here was to go middle-out rather than top down, hence we started with the user tasks (get popcorn, press play) and expanded up to the user activities (watch film). The user activities form the backbone of the user story map.

As Jeff said, when you are working with a product backlog it may be easier to find stuff with a map. I tend to agree. The GreenHopper team used a user story map back in March 2011 for our planning of the Rapid Board, and we’ve used it a number of times since for starting various epics.

You can grab a copy of the handout from Jeff’s talk here and then follow Jeff on Twitter. For further reading take a look at his article the new user story backlog is a map.

This is going to be one amazing week! Just take a look at the program. I would also like to point out that the hotel is brilliant  so stay here if you are ever in Salt Lake.

My Atlassian colleague Edwin Wong will be speaking on Wednesday at 2:20pm in the Arizona Room. Be sure to catch his lightning talk – Making the most of manual testing in a quality focused Agile team.

If you are in town and want to grab dinner with a few Aussies and Atlassians let me know.

In early September I will be up in Beijing presenting Be the change you seek at Agile China 2011. This is exciting for me for two reasons, 1) it is my first trip to China and 2) it is great to see people are interested in the talk I gave at Agile Australia back in June.

The theme of the conference is Fearless Change. It is great to see Jeff Smith from Suncorp on the program as I reckon that is one of the largest agile transformations in Australia. In a few years we may be talking and exploring the current agile transformation at Telstra.

What are the other big agile transformations taking place in Australia? Who else demonstrates fearless change?

Hope to see you at Agile China in September. If you can suggest any art galleries please let me know.