Agile has had significant adoption across many organizations; it may be that we have reached the point where Agile is now an innovation for late majority adopters1. There are many organizations who have already adopted Agile, from whom we can learn about what they did, and also still a large number of organizations who have not yet attempted to adopt Agile. For organizations who are considering the adoption of Lean-Agile mindset and practices, one question they may consider is: where do they start2 – what do they need to do to be Agile? Along with that question – hopefully recognizing that what they want is to ‘be Agile’; not just to ‘do Agile’ – organizations also may find themselves asking how they will know when they are Agile – what will being Agile look like?
This is one of the most common questions from the agile community whether it is leaders championing agile transformation or a wannabe agile coaches aspiring to up their game, so sharing some thoughts from my experience over many years as an agile coach and practitioner.
Agility Consulting International announced today that it has joined the Scaled Agile Partner Network as a Silver Partner. This worldwide network includes transformation and platform providers who help enterprises facilitate and accelerate business results through adoption of the Scaled Agile Framework ® (SAFe ® ).
Business Agility is the ability to compete and thrive by quickly responding to market needs that are revenue generating
This is easier said than done and needs serious dedication and perseverance from all levels or an organization.
From my experience as a transformational coach , I suggest organizations not to emulate the unicorns like Google, Amazon, Netflix etc. because all can’t be like them and all don’t need to be like them as each organizational goal is different and challenges unique so start looking within one’s own context to bring in the needed changes to enable the business agility.
On occasion, during early discussions with leaders that I’ve started to work with as part of agile coaching, when the subject of sustainability for how their team(s) are operating is raised, the reaction is one of ‘we have been operating this way for years; it’s already proven to be sustainable’. When I’ve had those conversations, I recognize that the foundations of the discussion are perception and the context of where things are at the time. Thinking about ‘sustainable’ from one perspective, a Scaled Agile goal from adopting a lean-agile mindset is to deliver the maximum customer value in the shortest sustainable lead time1. Thinking about it from an Agile journey perspective, what ‘sustainable’ means may vary for one person or another (e.g., for leadership or for an Agile Team member), particularly when seen through the prism of different points during an Agile transformation.
Everything can be an opportunity if you make it one. In the past three weeks everything from sports events to schools and anything non-essential has been cancelled in support of social distancing. Your Agile teams and all surrounding departments are now all remote. Where do you start?