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“Why Transformations Get Stuck” Presented at Global Scrum Gathering Austin 2019

By: David Hawks | May 28, 2019 |  Agile Transformation,  Article,  Leadership,  Slides

In this world of exponentially increasing market disruption, it is more imperative than ever for organizations to not only achieve operational agility (efficiency, speed, etc.), but also organizational agility (speed to respond to market change).

In this session at Global Scrum Gathering 2019, David Hawks showed attendees how leaders can guide their organization’s past top Agile transformation impediments and accelerate the momentum towards true organizational agility using a proven transformation framework, the Path to Agility®

Key Takeaways From “Why Transformations Get Stuck”:

  • The impacts of four top key impediments slowing or preventing significant gains.
  • An understanding of how an organization develops new abilities by implementing Agile practices and how those abilities result in better agility and impact an organization.
  • The ability to assess their current state of agility and where to focus near term

For more on our approach to building lasting business agility, you can check out our Transformation Services page.

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Webinar: Agile Case Study: Leading Change At Texas Mutual

By: Agile Velocity | Feb 27, 2019 |  Agile Transformation,  Leadership,  Webinar

Download the Full Recording Here

In 2018, Texas Mutual Insurance Company made the choice to go “all in” with Agile. After decades at the forefront of workers’ compensation insurance for the state of Texas, Texas Mutual recognized that they would have to change how they delivered value in order to stay at the top.

In this webinar, Erik Cottrell interviews Texas Mutual COO, Jeanette Ward. Learn how she’s leading and managing change across the enterprise, how Texas Mutual made the decision to go Agile, and how she worked with peers to leave behind old Command and Control leadership habits.

Key takeaways include:

  • An executive’s perspective on managing an Agile transformation
  • Why TXM takes risks in a risk-averse industry
  • Tips for preparing your organization for change
  • Benefits and results gained from implementing Agile in insurance
  • How to win over the Agile skeptics in your organization
Blog

5 Agile Trends We’re Seeing in 2019

By: David Hawks | Feb 11, 2019 |  Agile Coaching,  Agile Marketing,  Agile Transformation,  Article,  Leadership

We’ve been watching companies thrive—and struggle—for a long time. 2019 is our ninth year as a company and marks over 15 years of my personal work with clients as they transition to Agile. Throughout our time as a team, we’ve identified many key issues and problems that affect companies on their Path to Agility®.

Here are five Agile trends to look out for this year:

1. Companies still struggle with Agile implementation

It’s been 17 years since the Agile Manifesto was created. Unfortunately, there’s still more bad Agile than good, and it’s a bit sad that 17 years later so many companies still struggle to adopt Agile.

Over the last year or two, I’ve been conducting a survey in some of my talks, including when I spoke at AgileCamp 2018 in Dallas. We found that 75 percent of companies undergoing organizational transformation were using Superficial Agility—mimicking Agile practices without truly understanding them.

As stated above, Superficial Agility is a practice where companies adopt Agile methodology without fully comprehending or communicating why. These adoptions often fail because they’re practice-driven versus outcome-driven. These companies tend to implement Agile and Scrum without a clear, tangible goal in mind. If you have an ambiguous goal, you are guaranteed to have a bad outcome.

Remember: Agile is a solution, not an outcome. What we mean is, companies have to understand the business outcomes they want to see, such as delivering to market faster or responding more quickly to market demands. These are business outcomes people can align around and by which companies can measure success. Agile is how they can obtain those results.

2. More companies realize the importance of leadership involvement during an Agile transformation

The good news: Companies are recognizing that getting stuck is more than just a team problem. It’s a leadership problem that requires…

  • Organizational structure change
  • Behavior shifts that impact culture
  • Leaders to adjust their decision-making processes

We are seeing more clients asking for help as they realize leaders have to be a larger part of an Agile transformation to ensure success.

3. More companies are implementing the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe®)

Whereas Scrum traditionally takes places at the team level, Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe®) and other scaling frameworks, like Scrum at Scale, etc. take place in large organizations with thousands of team members, managers, and leaders. SAFe® is one of the hottest things among large companies today, and it continues to gain traction.

Unfortunately, we’re seeing companies repeat earlier mistakes made 10 years ago.  Back then, there was a similar sense of peer pressure to implement Scrum. Today, companies are following Agile trends, like SAFe® or Scrum at Scale, without understanding the reasoning or goals behind their practices and processes. As we saw with Scrum, this leads to a lack of business results for the organization.

SAFe® only works when companies become outcome-driven rather than practice-driven. Companies should know why they want to implement SAFe®, have a clear set of objectives they want to achieve, and apply the right amount of process to reach the goals they want to accomplish.

4. There are too many pretenders in the Agile coaching space

I know, I know—this is a bold statement. But let’s be honest. It takes a lot to help companies successfully undergo an Agile transformation. This business pays very well for consultants, and as a result, there are a lot of unqualified people who’ve hung their shingles in the Agile space.

The person hiring an Agile consultant is typically an uninformed buyer, and it’s easy to get snowed. These coaches may not have a deep understanding of how to implement an Agile transformation, how to motivate others, or the nuances of implementing Agile across different corporate cultures.

We’ve seen more and more individuals call themselves Agile coaches, yet they lack the experience and expertise to deliver value and coach organizations through major change. Few Agile coaches truly understand the patterns and challenges of agility because they simply haven’t done enough engagements to recognize them.

5. Agile is expanding outside of IT

This Agile trend has been gathering steam for a few years now. When we break down the core principles of Agile, we’ve found they apply anywhere you deal with complex systems and processes within an organization. Other parts of an organization, such as HR, marketing, and operations, are adopting many of the same practices we’ve been using in technology organizations for years. The need for greater visibility and predictability empowered teams, and a continuous improvement mindset has been identified across all departments.

However, Agile will need some translation when applied outside of IT. It’s not enough to mimic the practices of technology organizations. As always, we recommend being very clear about why the organization is implementing Agile.

Agile Trends From Here On Out

Agile continues to grow through whole-organization Agile transformations, Agile scaling frameworks, and Agile implementations outside of technology. Companies are drastically transforming and are highly responsive to market demands as a result.

Our industry’s challenge now is to avoid repeating mistakes of the past so that a decade from now we don’t end up with a lot of bad SAFe® and bad business-unit agility. Companies that don’t figure out how to get unstuck and achieve their outcomes are in danger of having their business models disrupted by organizations that get it—and 2019 will be no exception.

If you’d like to learn more about how to avoid getting stuck in your Agile transformation, check out our white paper, 8 Common Pitfalls of an Agile Transformation.

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Webinar Recap: What’s Next? Agile Trends in 2019

By: Agile Velocity | Jan 04, 2019 |  Agile Transformation,  Leadership,  Video,  Webinar

2018 was a remarkable year for the Agile community. Agile is now expanding into new departments and industries. Companies are continuing to tackle the challenge of scaling Agile throughout their organization. More and more leaders are getting involved in their organizational transformations every day.

What does this all mean for companies and their use of Agile in 2019?

In our latest webinar, Founder & CEO, David Hawks, and SVP of Client Success, Erik Cottrell, presented the Agile trends they’ve observed in 2018 and during Agile Velocity’s 8 years of business.

You’ll leave with…
– An overview of Agile trends occurring in companies across industries
– Agile transformation mistakes to look out for in 2019
– Quick tips for scaling Agile & implementing frameworks, like SAFe or Scrum at Scale
– Our predictions for the future of Agile


Watch Agile Trends in 2019 Webinar

By Holt Hackney, Originally Printed in Architecture and Governance Magazine

In the first couple sentences of “Agile Integration: The Blueprint for Enterprise Architecture,” a recently released report by Red Hat, the authors write: “Business success is increasingly based on your ability to react to change. As new disruptive players enter markets and technology upends what consumers expect, organizations increasingly need to change plans in much shorter cycles than ever before. Modern software architectures and processes can make organizations more effective at dealing with this change and emerging as winners in their markets.”

With the business case spelled out, the report goes on to describe “a new architectural framework called agile integration” that can help “your organization to create a competitive advantage.” This is not to be confused with the traditional “agile software development,” according to the authors.

Rather, the agile methodology, when applied to agile integration, “takes the complexity of existing systems, different data types, data streams, and customer expectations, and finds a way to unify them.

“A distributed integration architecture treats each integration point as a separate and unique deployment,” according to Red Hat, which is a provider of open source software solutions. “The integration can then be containerized and deployed locally for a specific project or team without affecting any other integrations deployed throughout the organization.

“Each instance uses an immutable definition . . . [making] the environment highly repeatable and consistent for each instance, which is ideal for continuous integration and continuous delivery pipelines.”

Erik Cottrell, Senior Vice President of Client Success and Strategy of Agile Velocity, suggested the developing trend was promising.

“Enterprise IT constraints are not new for companies adopting Agility,” he said. “What’s new, and exciting, is how courageous Lean/Agile Enterprises are now responding to IT infrastructure constraints with the same urgency and ingenuity as their application development counterparts. These companies recognize how profoundly IT challenges inhibit their ability to deliver value to their customer base and waste valuable team cycles. These IT innovations are foundational to an enterprise value stream.”

He continued: “Agility offers relief to teams who can’t know more than they do at the outset. By actually working with, and learning quickly from, small batch size teams are able to deliver value and get smarter along the way. Better still, new constraints and challenges are surfaced faster and can be addressed as work is being done, not just during planning or documenting. There’s a myth that no planning is done in Agile, but we find there’s the right kind of planning that actually allows teams to accelerate doing work.”

Near the end of the 19-page report, Red Hat concludes that “agility is a process, not a project” that is essential.

“It has never been more important for organizations to be able to react to change in the market, and it is largely IT systems that must deliver this ability to launch new services or update existing ones quickly. Rethinking IT infrastructure has never been more important, as it is the foundation of digital services.

“Infrastructure teams have historically been tied to very long, modulated processes because of the need to mitigate risk and maintain stability. However, it is possible to shift the mindset of infrastructure from hardware or platform-based to integration-based. Integration is not a subset of infrastructure.” Elaborating on this, the authors note that “it is a conceptual approach to infrastructure that includes data and applications with hardware and platforms.”

To achieve the aforementioned “agile integration,” the authors suggested three technology pillars:

Distributed integration, which uses messaging and enterprise integration patterns to integrate data and systems. These are broken down into small, team-driven integrations that are distributed, as needed, across projects and touchpoints.

Internal API management, which creates a reusable set of interfaces to allow development teams to engage with applications and systems. APIs provide guidance and structure to how applications should interact.

Containers, which allow integration projects to be closely aligned with development and operational projects and enable integrations to be developed, tested, and released similarly to software projects using DevOps methods.”

These resonate with leaders like Cottrell, whose company is at the heart of the “Agile” movement in Austin, Texas.

“These three pillars allow teams to get to ‘done’ by providing the necessary access to and integration with key technologies without waiting in an IT queue, where the request has to be prioritized against other, unrelated requests,” he said. “By giving teams access to these building blocks, they’ve reduced friction and allow for remarkable acceleration at scale, all without losing necessary discipline or appropriate controls.”

Red Hat put the proverbial exclamation point on the concept in its report when it wrote that “technology has to be used to support culture change, and that means working to make infrastructure teams—and not just their software—more agile.” A&G

View the Article PDF Here

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The 3 Principles Agile Leaders Should Live By During An Organizational Transformation

By: rachel.abrams@agilevelocity.com Cottrell | Nov 09, 2018 |  Agile Transformation,  Article,  Leadership

Today’s Agile leaders manage with a more complete arsenal of skills and techniques than leaders of the past who led fundamentally different teams. For Agile organizations, the days of top-down hierarchy and autonomous decision making have joined the floppy disk as obsolete and outdated concepts in modern business. Leaders still can be effective without following Agile business development principles, but those who embrace the Agile methodology achieve greater success, improve the customer experience, and boost employee engagement.

Modern Agile leaders now see themselves as catalysts supporting their teams’ and organizations’ efforts to accelerate towards organizational agility and increased efficiency. While leaders still exhibit solid situational and personal leadership skills that make them strong individually, they’re adopting key new characteristics and exhibiting forward-thinking traits that set them apart.

What Modern Agile Leaders Get Right

Agile business leaders follow these key principles.

  1. Optimizing the whole.

All too often, leaders understandably don’t fully appreciate the significant change they personally can affect across an entire organization. They can have an outsized positive impact. By necessity, they tend to think within the existing framework of the people who work directly for them and report up to them–and there are often enough troubles there. However, this view limits the big impact they can make across their organization.

Modern leaders strive to create value across the entire company rather than just the department or groups under their jurisdiction. Doing so requires working across different departments and working closely with other leaders and their teams to optimize work. The leaders who are able to gain enough altitude to see (or imagine) work flowing across organizations, from hand-off to hand-off, until that work reaches the customer, will likely find significant opportunities for improvement that ensure the whole company is delivering increased value to its customers.

Optimizing the whole allows the groups that are best able to solve problems to work horizontally across different departments to deliver the best products or customer experiences. This requires leaders to build durable relationships with key colleagues, personnel, and other managers to ensure they craft positive experiences, jointly work out challenges, share disappointments, and have the necessary hard conversations about how the company can improve as a whole.

  1. Personal Leadership and Context Awareness

Agile leaders are embracing a new level of introspection about themselves, their leadership approach, and their role within their company. They do so willingly because they’ve bought into a radical idea that by empowering their people they are harnessing far more capability, wisdom, and horsepower than they could ever hope to have by themselves. This is a massive shift from a “hero leader” who does it all, to the catalyst leader who empowers her teams. This change can begin with a simple personal leadership assessment that will remind leaders of what they value, what matters, and what their role is.

Personal leadership questions include:

  • Why am I here?
  • Why am I investing so much in the place at this time?
  • What do I hope to accomplish?
  • What am I going to do about it?

The answers to these questions serve to remind the Agile leader of what motivates them and what they care about. That has significant benefits to everyone around them, but mostly, to the leader herself.

Now the truth is leaders–Agile or otherwise–often find themselves in very tough spots. Clients are upset, leadership is growing impatient, work isn’t being delivered on time, etc. There’s no end to the challenges. So how does a modern leader respond? Again, rather than simply passing along the angst, anger, or abuse, modern leaders are learning to gain context, to find root causes, and to make sense of the cacophony of noise swirling around them.

Gaining context awareness can be a huge asset, even in the midst of a crisis. Again, there are a few questions that leaders can ask to gain valuable perspective:

  • What is really going on, and what can I/we do about it?
  • Do we collectively have the skills and competencies needed?
  • How will my and my team’s actions affect those around me?

By dedicating time to answering these questions, the leader can see how to tackle the problem utilizing the team’s strengths and mitigating weaknesses. Rather than rushing in, can offer a situational view that will provide the whole team breathing room to think more clearly about how to take effective action swiftly.

  1. Effectively Empowering Talent by Managing With Intention

Author David Marquet, former commander of the USS Santa Fe nuclear submarine, discusses the impact intentional leaders can have on every level of an organization in his book, “Turn the Ship Around.”(It’s one of my favorite leadership books!)

Marquet discusses how intentional leaders empower employees to make smart, sound decisions at the origin of insight and seek the best understanding of problems and opportunities. Managing with intention provides a frame of reference to create intentional employees who are equipped to be leaders themselves who in turn manage with intention.

While I suggest you read Marquet’s excellent book, here are three of the main skills necessary to lead with intention:

  • Clarification: Make sure all team members fully understand the scope of their roles.
  • Competency: Ensure team members have the ability to do their work, solve problems, and make sound decisions.
  • Certification: Have employees closest to problems discuss the different angles and dimensions of the problem that are critical for success.

Leading with intention shifts management from a top-down decision-making framework to a bottom-up hierarchy. Employees at the root of problems grapple with issues and propose various solutions. They are fully empowered to overcome challenges and only require a leader to approve their decisions and provide additional insight or guidance. The entire team leads with intention, which saves valuable time since leaders aren’t working through problems alone and can rely on their teams to overcome challenges. Marquet calls this “leader-leader,” and it’s powerful.

Leaders often think their primary duty in the game is to block and tackle and make hard decisions. Intentional leaders, however, share certain decision-making rights by allowing team members to evaluate, judge, and assess problems with all the right thought behind it. Intentional leadership allows individuals to take ownership of challenges rather than roll problems upstairs to senior executives. This shift empowers individuals at the point of problems to solve crucial issues, eliminates cumbersome chain-of-command hierarchy, increases speed and efficiency, and makes your company and teams more agile.

 

Intentional Agile leaders share many traits with their peers, including confidence, integrity, empathy, honesty, and accountability. They also dedicate time to thinking about how they can best prepare the people and teams closest to problems to be ready, willing, and able to solve challenges and to properly inform supervisors of their results.

 

For information on our approach to building lasting business agility, you can check out our Transformation Services page.

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Webinar Recap “Pulling Off An Agile Transformation: True Stories from Leaders”

By: Agile Velocity | Oct 09, 2018 |  Agile Transformation,  Leadership,  Webinar

We could give you advice all day on a million different Agile subjects–but we thought it might help to hear from someone who’s been in your shoes.

We interviewed Will Simpson, COO of New Iron, and our own Erik Cottrell, SVP of Client Success, to learn about their Agile transformation stories from ideation to execution and everything in between.

See below for the full webinar recording and summary.

Summary

Erik and Will met nearly 7 years ago when they led an Agile transformation in their organization as the Product leader and the Technology leader respectively. Here is their story.

Experiencing Pains In The Organization

Erik and Will’s company had huge aspirations and smart people. Unfortunately, there was no formal product team, broken and non-existent processes, eager clients, and a challenging multi-stack technology foundation that led them to seek change.

Betting On Agile

Will initially brought Agile to their organization at a team level through training with Agile Velocity. He invested time into creating a solid foundation of knowledge across all teams.

Further still, he sat down with each member of his technology organization and interviewed them. This process brought to light the lack of Agile expertise in his organization. This is when he made the decision to bring in Agile Velocity as a full transformation partner. However, he quickly understood a change of this size would require buy-in from all areas of the organization–not just technology.

Getting Buy-In

Tough Conversations

For Erik and Will, buy-in started as a series of hard, honest conversations between the two of them. They established an internal partnership built on trust, safety, and candor, which allowed them to depend on each other as they navigated through organizational change.

Remember: Even leaders don’t have to work alone.

Buy-In From Peers

Before you ever ask for buy-in, first ask yourself this question: “What matters to the other side?”  For your Finance leader, the answer is probably budget and process. For your HR leader, maybe it’s company culture.

Whatever the answer might be, focus on finding a way to account for those interests. Understanding what matters to another person or department is the first step in convincing them to join your cause.

Buy-In From Teams

Change has the potential to be a very scary thing. There will likely be individuals who worry about losing their job in the midst of organizational change. Communication of your goals and the realities of your planned changes will be key to mitigating tension or stress during your Agile transformation.

Erik and Will’s Agile Transformation Checklist

1. Answer the question “Why do we want to change the organization?”

Have a clear vision or goal for your Agile transformation you can communicate throughout the entire organization.

2. Gain buy-in

You cannot create lasting change without including the entire organization. Have open and honest conversations with your teams, leaders, and peers to gain their willing participation.

3. Have a change framework

Decide on a transformation or change framework that is right for your organization. (Explore our change framework, the Path to Agility®, here).

4. Find a great partner

A trusted partner is a game changer in an Agile transformation. Choose a partner that you can rely on for honesty, expertise, and guidance.

5. Lead with trust and candor

Creating a culture of openness and safety will be vital as you progress through your Agile journey–and it starts with the leaders.

6. Remember your customer

Agile is all about getting you closer to your customers. Don’t forget the benefits you’ll be delivering to them as a result of the changes you’re making.

7. Have fun!

Don’t let the stress of change overshadow your progress. Celebrate small wins–you deserve a pat on the back.

 

Click Here to Download the Recording

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Webinar Recap – Organizational Agility: How to Take Agile Beyond the Team Level

By: Agile Velocity | Aug 08, 2018 |  Agile Transformation,  Video,  Webinar

 

Summary

Why Organizational Agility is Necessary

The current rate of disruption and the increasing amount of global competition all contribute to what we now call a “VUCA” world:

Volatile – Speed, magnitude, turbulence, and dynamics of change

Uncertain – Unclear about the present and hard to predict the future

Complex – Multiple interdependencies amongst a globally interconnected world

Ambiguous – Lack of clarity of the meaning of events

Organizational agility allows you to respond quickly to this unpredictable world. Without it, you risk being overwhelmed by the rate of change.

What is Organizational Agility?

Organizational agility focuses on leadership teamwork and the alignment of every part of the organization around a shared understanding of major vision, goals, and working principles in order to deliver value quickly and efficiently.  

Benefits of Organizational Agility

  • Focus and clarity
  • Innovation
  • An engaged workforce
  • Speed to adapt to market
  • Happy customers

7 Steps to Implement Organizational Agility & Excel in a VUCA World

1. Leadership Maturity

Management styles are changing from the old methods to a more modern, Agile management.

2. Culture Maturity

Agile emphasizes alignment across the organization, allowing you to let go of old priorities (i.e. strict processes and control) and embrace higher values.

3. Throttle Demand to Match Throughput

Look at throughput in terms of how much work your organization can do at once and then sequence the work to deliver value the fastest.

4. Prioritize Learning Over Execution

Plan and work iteratively, where feedback loops are short and you can release small portions of the project at a time.

5. Breakdown Silos to Form Cross-Functional Teams

Limit cross-team dependencies by creating a permanent team of people who represent different departments.

6. Change in Funding Models

Invest, don’t budget. Give projects enough money to start, utilize your iterative development style to evaluate value, and invest accordingly.

7. Manage the Change

Organizational change management allows you to be methodical in your approach to coaching everyone–from leaders to teams–through the change.

 

Get a more tailored approach to implementing organizational agility. Chat with an expert.

 

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Is Your Organization Equipped With the Right Talent and Expertise to Become Agile?

By: Agile Velocity | Aug 05, 2018 |  Agile Transformation,  Article

“I cannot say whether things will get better if we change; what I can say is they must change if we are to get better.” — Georg C. Lichtenberg, German Philosopher and Physicist

If your organization is just starting out on the Agile journey, alignment to Agile business initiatives is the first stage in the Path to Agility®. Leaders should to look across the breadth of their organization and ask, “Do I have the right people and the right expertise in place to make the transition to becoming Agile?” This question helps leaders identify their organization’s readiness to undertake the Agile transformation. It also creates an initial roadmap to begin the transformation by identifying the three main areas of the organization that will be impacted: key Agile roles, shifts in leadership, and new approaches to management.

Successfully navigating change across these three core areas are the cornerstones of implementing the Agile approach.

3 Things to Consider When Transitioning

It’s not enough to have ready and willing employees–they must also be able. Companies considering moving to Agile need to know beforehand exactly what is involved in the transformation to ensure they have the right people in place to make a successful transition. Inside the Agile transformation, there will be new roles for both key employees and leaders, and there will be many new duties for most people within the organization.

Prior to undertaking an Agile transformation, leaders should understand three key elements of how the change will impact their organization:

  1. New Agile Roles. Leaders will have to identify fundamental roles that might not exist in the organization, and where these roles will come from. Oftentimes, these roles require employees to learn a new set of skills.
  2. Leadership. Leaders and the entire executive team must be at the forefront of spearheading change.
  3. Adaptation. Leadership must be willing to adapt to changing management styles, as well as develop new skills that fit within the Agile framework.

Undertaking the Agile Transformation: New Agile Roles

There are two key Agile roles within a transformation that often are challenging to fill because they typically don’t exist prior to an Agile implementation:

  • ScrumMaster
  • Product Owner

Let’s take a closer look at both roles.

Product Owner

The primary function of the Product Owner is prioritizing a team’s backlog of work. This critical step allows teams to consistently deliver on its highest-value items. The Product Owner role is essential to success–without it, teams lack clear focus and won’t be successful.

Where does this role come from? For companies in the software development space, this role typically aligns to product management roles. Existing product managers may assume additional Product Owner duties. However, organizational leaders need to be aware of how adding extra work to those people’s plates impacts their current duties. Ensure they have enough bandwidth to take on the Product Owner role or be prepared to hire new team members to handle this extra layer of interaction.

Companies in the IT enterprise sector typically lack strong Product Owner functions, so it may be a completely new role for those organizations. There is some debate about whether the Product Owner role should come from the business side or the technology side of an organization. We believe it can come from either, so long as Product Owners have these three things:

    • Domain knowledge
    • Authority
    • Time to work closely with a team on a daily basis

ScrumMaster

Talented ScrumMasters are leaders, facilitators, and motivators rather than drivers and taskmasters. The primary responsibility of the ScrumMaster is to facilitate the exchange of information, help teams decide what they can achieve in a given time frame, and ensure obstacles and barriers are eliminated that impede success.

More than 80 percent of all organizations that implement an Agile transformation adopt the Scrum methodology. Each team within your organization needs a ScrumMaster, and organizational leaders need to know that Scrum duties can consume up to 50 percent of an employee’s time. If companies have dedicated full-time ScrumMasters, those people typically work with multiple teams.

Now that we’ve identified the key Agile roles needed to implement Agile, let’s delve deeper into the two other primary aspects of an Agile transformation.

Undertaking the Agile Transformation: Organizational Change

Agile is much more than a process change at the team level. It’s a sweeping organizational change that impacts a company’s entire culture, leadership style, and behavior. These comprehensive transformations may require organizational changes throughout the ranks of management.

Leaders need to ask, “Do I have anyone in my organization with expertise in managing organizational change?” Typically, most executives lack organizational change management skills. Leaders might have to consider bringing in someone to help plan and manage the organizational changes who also can help develop organizational change expertise skills in key employees.

The key elements of organizational change include:

  1. Effectively communicating change
  2. Managing incremental rollouts of change
  3. Keeping positive momentum going for change

These things are difficult to implement and handle successfully. Agile Velocity’s transformation roadmap outlines an organization’s Path to Agility®.

Undertaking the Agile Transformation: Change Management

The Agile transformation works best when there’s 100-percent buy-in from the top. Since an Agile transformation completely flips the switch and turns the organizational chart upside down, this can be a difficult path for companies to navigate.

Leaders often are required to adjust from a traditional top-down hierarchy style of management, in which they primarily control and delegate, to working with independent, self-organizing, and fully Agile teams. Leadership shifts to the teams closest to the problems, which may require some organizational restructuring and remodeling. These changes can create some identity crisis for certain leaders, especially front-line managers who might lose the teams with which they are directly linked. Leaders may need to consider making some management shifts in order to ensure change is embraced rather than impeded.

A big element of being Agile is understanding the necessary shifts at all levels of the organization and creating safety for leaders whose roles and duties will change. They often have to give up their teams or their “turf” and are given something new that might be out of their element. Leaders must ensure they manage these changes in an effective way and create safety for leaders, teams, and others within the organization.

This is how Agile transformation creates a different way of working and impacts the entire culture of an organization. Agile Velocity’s team of experts specializes in helping companies implement and successfully navigate this organizational change. You can learn more about our approach on our Transformation Services page.

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Will Agile Deliver? Getting Your Peers On Board With Your Agile Transformation

By: Agile Velocity | Aug 04, 2018 |  Agile Transformation,  Article,  Leadership

It takes a village to make an Agile transformation successful in any company. Leaders who’ve decided to implement Agile often find they need data and success stories they can offer their peers so the entire leadership team understands, supports, and feels confident in the decision to transform. The following are talking points for you to share with your colleagues.

So, will Agile deliver? Yes!

In 2017, VersionOne’s 12th Annual State of Agility Report reveals that organizations are seeing positive results in the areas they set out to improve when they decided to undergo an Agile transformation. In fact, “four of the top five reported reasons for adopting agile” are also reported to be the areas most-improved by adopting agile. These include:

Alignment between business leaders and departments

Agile organizations put heavy emphasis on transparency and communication between all levels of the business, allowing for clear alignment on goals and the quick removal of impediments.

Management of changing priorities within the business

The iterative nature of Agile accommodates for a business’ ever-changing priorities, giving leaders the time to reevaluate often and pivot in response to market changes as opposed to falling behind competitors.

Productivity

Agile principles and practices increase productivity by limiting waste in the production system complexities, such as handoffs, dependencies, late integrations, etc. This results in the reduction of repeat work, defect costs, and failed initiatives because issues are uncovered earlier in the process.

Delivery speed/Time-to-market

An iterative release cycle also allows teams to release smaller, bite-sized chunks of a product more often. Instead of getting tied up in (incredibly) long-term plans, teams typically release products every 2-4 weeks. Once an organization becomes predictable like this, feedback loops are tighter, giving the organization the ability to give customers higher quality, more valuable products.

Agile has proven time and time again to bring benefits to every level of an organization. Thanks to these benefits, it has rapidly taken over software development and is now spreading to other departments from marketing to human resources and beyond. Today, results of an Agile transformation are branching out to include things like more leads, higher employee engagement, and more recruits.

How do you ensure a successful Agile transformation in your organization?

As with any aspect of business, when you understand and utilize best practices, you see more impactful results at a quicker rate. But don’t take our word for it–take it from others just like you.

For their 2017 report, VersionOne surveyed 1,492 people in Agile organizations from around the world and put together a list of their top 5 tips for success in Agile. These tips included:

1. Developing internal Agile coaches

2. Using consistent practices and process across all teams

3. Implementing a common tool across teams

4. Investing in external Agile consultants and trainers

5. Protecting your Agile transformation with an Executive Sponsor

 

Over time, we found leaders are more often than not looking for a way to make informed business decisions with confidence. Without a predictable cadence of delivery, organizations are usually flying blind when it comes to making decisions about sequencing work and planning for how those decisions will impact their market and the forecast of all initiatives in flight. Agile is helping companies across many industries solve these problems. 

We hope this article provides you with a few key points to bring up to coworkers when chatting about Agile. If you’re interested in learning more about how we help organizations build lasting agility, check out our Agile  Transformation Services page. We’ve incorporated these top 5 tips coupled with a focus on producing desired business outcomes into our approach to ensure lasting organizational change.