Are regulatory projects a better fit for adaptive or deterministic delivery approaches?
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.
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During a presentation at a local agile meetup this past week I asked the audience to think about what sorts of projects, products or organizations wouldn't be a good fit for the use of agile or adaptive approaches and one of the attendees felt that regulatory projects weren't suitable.
Non-discretionary compliance projects present many challenges, but does this make them help or hinder their delivery via agile approaches?
Here are some advantages to using adaptive life cycles with such projects.
- The "what" is inflexible, but there is usually wiggle room around the "how". Once external regulations have been translated into a set of internal business requirements there are many ways in which those requirements can be met. With deterministic approaches, a business owner might be tempted to go for a "Cadillac" fully automated solution whereas with an adaptive approach, the focus might be on minimally meeting the requirements through a combination of manual and automated steps and then letting empirical data and budgetary and schedule constraints dictate what incremental enhancements get made.
- Adaptive approaches encourage fixing schedule and cost and letting scope remain variable. With regulatory projects, schedule is usually externally fixed and since there is no business value in going above and beyond the regulatory requirements, a ceiling on costs could also be set.
- Frequent feedback from end users on what is getting delivered increases the likelihood that complex regulatory requirements are correctly understood.
- Early and regular releases will reduce the learning curve for sustaining the process changes.
- Risk exposure can be used as a criterion for prioritizing the backlog of regulatory requirements. With this approach, a regulatory business owner can feel confident that those requirements posing the highest risk exposure to the company get delivered first.
However, there might also be some good reasons to follow a deterministic approach.
- These projects often involve changing multiple legacy processes and systems. Such changes might require heavy governance oversight and there could be blockers such as a lack of automated test capabilities or dedicated environments.
- Regulatory staff are often unable to dedicate themselves to the delivery project given their operational responsibilities so it might be difficult to secure a product owner or other business users.
- Regulatory projects often require participation of external partners such as vendors and government regulators. These stakeholders might be unwilling or incapable of working with an adaptive delivery approach.
- Regulatory business owners might be uncomfortable with not fully reviewing and approving the details of the "how" upfront. While this could be said of any business owner who hasn't previously worked with adaptive delivery approaches, the perceived risks and impact of failure are much higher for regulatory projects.
As usual, when deciding what delivery approach to take, the specific context of the project and supporting organization have to be taken into consideration.
Posted on: September 09, 2018 07:00 AM |
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Comments (17)
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Drew Craig
Sr. Agile & Product Coach| Vanguard
Philadelphia, Pa, United States
Good list and insights. Thanks, Kiron.
Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Good highlights and points Kiron.
Ashleigh Kennett-Smith
ICT Project Manager| Australian Red Cross Lifeblood
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Very thought provoking Kiron. I particularly like the terms adaptive and deterministic approaches (others may have seen/used them before but they're new to me).
I currently work in a highly regulated environment and suggesting an Agile approach certainly causes some concern at times. I think your idea of separating the "what" from the "how" is very helpful and can help articulate why Agile can/will still deliver the quality.
One of the issues with modifying existing regulated systems and processes (a fairly common situation for us) is that the changes must not cause other parts of the system or processes to become non-compliant . This can often be difficult and time consuming for people to map out. I think the adaptive/iterative approach could provide a way forward on this.
Tamer Zeyad Sadiq
Assistant Cost Manager| Turner & Townsend
Riyadh, Ar Riyad, Saudi Arabia
RAJESH K L
Project Manager, PMP| Bharat Electronics, Bengaluru, India
Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
Interesting points made and thanks for sharing
Thanks Ashleigh - great point about the potential for compliance regression in existing associated systems!
Thanks Rami, Tamer & Rajesh!
Pier Luigi Calabria
Project Manager| INFORM Institut für Operations Research und Management GmbH, Aachen, Germany
Aachen, Germany
Very interesting, thanks for sharing
Good insights, Kiron. Nice article. Thanks.
That's a good list of the pros and cons Kiron. I see regulatory projects as applicable to Agile, with a bit of tweaking.
Anish Abraham
Privacy Program Manager| University of Washington
Auburn, Wa, United States
Good insights Kiron and thanks for sharing.
Guilherme Caloba
Production Engineer| PETROBRAS
Rio De Janeiro, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Good insights. As usual, it depends on the case. Thank you for sharing.
Pench Batta
Enterprise Lean Agile DevOps Coach /SAFe Program Consultant (SPC6)| Capgemini, Inc.
Bentonville, Ar, United States
Belal Mahmoud
Technical Office Manager| Alkancit
Jeddah, Western Province, Saudi Arabia
Stelian ROMAN
Project Manager| MicroSafety
Carlingford, New South Wales, Australia
Interesting, thanks for sharing
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