Don't hate the game, hate the player
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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(Before you correct me for misstating the iconic quote in this article's title, read ahead)
Over the past week, I've seen a number of posts from different practitioners on the Mastodon.world instance complaining about agile.
Here are a few of the examples I've read:
- Agile events or meetings taking up most of the productive time each day
- User stories not providing an understanding of a user's needs and wants
- Continuous delivery of changes resulting in significant unplanned outages
- Sprint burndown charts showing zero completed work till the very end of a sprint
Now if someone's experiences with adaptive delivery are limited to such examples it is no wonder that the reaction would be "Agile sucks!"
To which I respond #NotMyAgile.
Until someone invents a bracelet which delivers mild shocks to leaders and team members who ignore the basics of adaptive delivery, adoption challenges will persist.
And the more concurrent teams an organization has, the greater the likelihood of this unless each team has sufficient support and guidance to help them through these growing pains. An in the early days when there are very few people who know what to avoid, their capacity should be the constraint on how much work is done using agile approaches.
But barring that, team members can ask themselves the following question when they, the team as a whole or their leaders are deciding on what to do: "Does this result in greater value delivered to our customers, improvements to the quality of what we are doing or will it help improve our engagement or motivation?".
If the answer is "no", speak up.
Posted on: January 26, 2023 09:00 AM |
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Comments (10)
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Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
You make a very good argument, Kiron. I’ve seen those sorts of complaints about Agile a lot lately as well.
The reversed tile makes total sense given then context.
Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Kwiyuh Michael Wepngong
Community Champion
Financial Management Specialist | US Peace Corps
Yaounde, Centre, Cameroon
Luis Branco
CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª
Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
The theme that brought to our reflection and debate is very interesting.
Thank you for sharing and for your opinions.
I like the analogy
We can try to reflect on the subject based on the practice of a sport. Example: Soccer
How many practitioners are there in the world?
How many clubs are there in the world?
How many practitioners/clubs reach the first division?
What is the percentage of top players (players from the 1st world division) compared to practitioners of the sport?
What is the percentage of soccer players compared to people who watch the games (in stadiums and/or on television)? (often referred to as "bench trainers")
What is the percentage of lovers of this sport compared to the world population?
The most pertinent question, in my opinion... does it make sense to practice this sport?
Thanks Luis - good analogy with soccer!
Luis Branco
CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª
Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
Let's face it.
It is a sport with many players, many admirers, even more spectators...
And besides, it's a billion-dollar business.
Aditya Kumar
Senior Assistant Vice President| EXL Service
Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India
Latha Thamma reddi
Sr Product and Portfolio Management (Automation Innovation)| DXC Technology
Mckinney, Tx, United States
Nice Read, Very interesting, thanks for sharing.
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