Better Decisions Lead to Better Outcomes: Guided Continuous Improvement
Categories:
agile,
Scrum,
Kanban,
lean,
Choose your WoW,
#ContinuousImprovement,
#Kaizen,
#ProcessImprovement,
GCI
Categories: agile, Scrum, Kanban, lean, Choose your WoW, #ContinuousImprovement, #Kaizen, #ProcessImprovement, GCI
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In our previous blog, Continuous Improvement Through Experimentation, we worked through how teams can evolve their way of working (WoW) through experimentation and kaizen. Figure 1 depicts the logic of a single pass through a Plan-Do-Study-Act cycle for doing so. The team identifies a potential way to improve their WoW, they experiment with it for a bit, they assess how well it worked for them, then they keep what works well and drop what doesn’t. Figure 1. Continuous improvement through experimentation (click to enlarge). Figure 2 shows how the effectiveness of a team’s WoW rises over time via this experimentation-based strategy. When an experiment with a new technique works (the experiment is successful) the team’s effectiveness increases. When an experiment “fails” their effectiveness dips for a bit but then rises back to where it was once they go back to their previous WoW. Figure 2. Team effectiveness improves over time by experimenting with new WoW (click to enlarge).
So what can we do to improve on this? The linchpin is the very first step in the process of Figure 1, the identification of a technique to experiment with. As you see in Figure 3, when we improve the likelihood that a technique will work in our situation then our effectiveness rises faster due to more successful experiments. We call this guided continuous improvement. Figure 3. Guided continuous improvement increases the chance of successful experiments (click to enlarge). It’s a simple idea – with better process decisions we achieve better process outcomes, as you can see in Figure 4. There are three ways that you can do this:
Figure 4. Team effectiveness improves at a quicker rate with guided continuous improvement (click to enlarge).
Continuous improvement, evolving your WoW through experiments, is a proven way to achieve lasting process improvement. Lean practitioners have been doing this for decades and virtually every DevOps case study advises you to evolve your WoW this way. Guided continuous improvement takes it one step further and streamlines your experimentation efforts. MORE INFORMATION
For more information about choosing and evolving your WoW, we humbly suggest that you consider reading our book Choose Your WoW! A Disciplined Agile Delivery Handbook for Optimizing Your Way of Working. If you want to succeed at enterprise agile you need choices, not prescriptions. |
Continuous Improvement Through Experimentation
Categories:
agile,
Scrum,
Kanban,
lean,
Process,
#ChooseYourWoW,
#ContinuousImprovement,
#Experimentation,
#Kaizen,
#ProcessImprovement,
Experiment,
GCI
Categories: agile, Scrum, Kanban, lean, Process, #ChooseYourWoW, #ContinuousImprovement, #Experimentation, #Kaizen, #ProcessImprovement, Experiment, GCI
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A fundamental philosophy of agile is that teams should own their own process, or as we like to say in Disciplined Agile (DA) teams should choose their way of working (WoW). Of course this is easier said than done in practice. The challenge is that every team is unique and faces a unique situation – in other words, context counts. Furthermore, there are no “best practices,” rather, every practice has tradeoffs and works well in some situations and poorly in others. Worse yet, you really don’t know how well a technique will work for you until you actually try it out in your environment. Given all of this, how can a team choose its WoW? Since the 1980s the lean community has shown that an effective way to evolve your process is to do so as a series of small incremental improvements, a strategy called kaizen. Numerous organizations have taken this approach over the years, and virtually every single DevOps success story is based on a multi-year kaizen-based continuous improvement strategy. Figure 1 depicts the workflow of implementing a single improvement, with Deming’s Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) loop on the right-hand side to indicate the iterative nature of the overall process. Figure 1. Running an experiment to evolve your WoW (click to enlarge).
Let’s explore each step one at a time:
Figure 2 shows how your team’s effectiveness improves over time with a continuous improvement approach. When you experiment with a new technique and it works out well for your team then your team effectiveness improves. When an experiment “fails” your team effectiveness dips for a bit – the technique didn’t work well in your situation – but then you end the experiment and go back to your previous way of working (your team’s level of effectiveness goes back to where it was). Figure 2. Experiment to evolve your WoW (click to enlarge).
When you keep at it, when you adopt a kaizen mindset, your team effectiveness increases over time as we see in Figure 3. The figure also shows that when you first adopt a continuous improvement strategy that your team effectiveness drops at first because you’re learning how to follow the continuous improvement process of Figure 1. In many ways you begin this improvement journey by experimenting with this experimentation-based strategy. Figure 3. Continuous improvement over time (click to enlarge).
Some organizations struggle with the idea of experimentation, likely because they still believe in the idea of “best practices” and often because they’re looking for an easy answer. They’re afraid to experiment because they might “fail,” not realizing that a failed experiment teaches you what doesn’t work for your team given your current situation. Running small, “safe to fail” experiments is absolutely critical for improving your WoW. Where this blog overviewed the strategy of Continuous Improvement, in the next blog in this series we will see how better decisions lead to better outcomes via Guided Continuous Improvement. Stay tuned! More Information
For more information about choosing and evolving your WoW, we humbly suggest that you consider reading our book Choose Your WoW! A Disciplined Agile Delivery Handbook for Optimizing Your Way of Working. If you want to succeed at enterprise agile you need choices, not prescriptions. |





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