Are your agile transformation blockers like agents in The Matrix?
From the Easy in theory, difficult in practice Blog
by Kiron Bondale
My musings on project management, project portfolio management and change management.
I'm a firm believer that a pragmatic approach to organizational change that addresses process & technology, but primarily, people will maximize chances for success.
This blog contains articles which I've previously written and published as well as new content.
Recent Posts
Leading Through Crisis Means Leading Through Context
"It's the end. But the moment has been prepared for." - retirement lessons from the Doctor
Just because they are non-critical, doesn't mean they are not risky!
Just because they are non-critical, doesn't mean they are not risky!
How will YOU avoid these AI-related cognitive biases?
Categories
Agile,
Artificial Intelligence,
Career Development,
Change Management,
Communications Management,
Decision Making,
Governance,
Hiring,
Kanban,
Lessons Learned,
Personal Development,
PMO,
Portfolio Management,
Project Management,
Resource Management,
Risk Management,
Risk Management,
Schedule Management,
Scheduling,
Tools
Date
Agile transformations are susceptible to a variety of impediments but sometimes these hurdles are not as high as we believe them to be.
In almost any company other than a startup, some or all of the following tangible blockers will not only be present at the beginning of the journey, they may continue to stymie teams years into their transformation.
- The inability to dedicate primary roles (e.g. Product Owners, Agile Leads) to a single value stream
- Geographic dispersion and distribution of team members
- Legacy integration requirements which throttle the pace of continuous integration or continuous delivery
- Complex compliance requirements
- Onerous and inefficient procurement policies
- Labor contracts or other constraints on developing generalizing specialists
- The lack of comprehensive automated test suites or similar accelerators
- Delivery and control partners who cannot be influenced to transform their delivery models
Are these likely to disappear quickly? Not likely. Some such as technical debt or legacy integrations can be eliminated over time with persistence and sustained investment but others are a natural by-product of a company's industry, the free market or globalization.
So when I hear teams complaining about these blockers during their daily stand-ups or in their retrospectives I recall Morpheus's exchange with Neo at the beginning of The Matrix.
Morpheus: To your left there is a window: open it... use the scaffold to get to the roof.
Neo: No way. No way. This is crazy.
Morpheus: There are two ways out of that building: one is that scaffold, the other is in their custody. You take a chance either way: I leave it to you.
Neo's fears and doubts are more crippling than the lack of a dumpster below his office building which he could jump into or a fire escape ladder close at hand to get to the roof.
As the movie progresses, Neo continues to struggle with overcoming these constraints and Morpheus continues to coach him: You have to let it all go, Neo. Fear, doubt, and disbelief. Free your mind.
But Morpheus, like agile coaches, can only show the way.
Teams, like Neo must walk the path themselves. Once Neo understands the Matrix for what it is and embraces his place in it, his perception of limitations including agents evolves such that he no longer perceives them as great a threat as he and others make them out to be.
Once teams successfully adopt the right mindset, they can respect the impact of organizational blockers but continue to discover ways of being agile.
Posted on: March 11, 2018 06:59 AM |
Permalink
Comments (6)
Please login or join to subscribe to this item
Change is all about getting out of your comfort zone and we usually don't want to do it. There always are few people in organization who will always be ready to challenge status-quo but most of us are lazy. Top level commitment, structural / role changes, deliberate effort and making teams believe that the transformation is going to improve their functioning and thus productivity is a huge challenge for startup. Once an organization has managed this far than it's all about keeping up the momentum to overcome the blockers which are mentioned in article.
Thank you Kiron for an informative article.
Thanks Najam - agility boils down to seeing a doorway where others only see a wall.
Kiron
There will always be naysayers. There will always be teams of people to cajole, to urge, to push towards a vision.
This is why I like to work with teams with a healthy mix of young professionals. These are folks who do not have set habits and are willing to adapt. It provides a layer of support upon which it becomes easier to convince the other, more senior, team members to adapt.
I just fear the day where I will, myself, turn into one of these stodgy, inflexible people.
Thanks Karan - just remember that age is just an issue of mind over matter - if you don't mind, it doesn't matter!
Kiron
Please Login/Register to leave a comment.
|
"A noble spirit enbiggens the smallest man"
- Jebediah Springfield
|