Have you found that your agile transformation has become… stuck?
Sure, things went well in the beginning. You fed your organization a steady diet of sprints and ceremonies, with user stories and a burndown chart-chaser. And you saw lots of positive results—at first.
But now, you can’t seem to get things moving again. You have what we call transformation constipation.
As fun as it is to riff on medical ads, our purpose in diagnosing transformation constipation comes from our experience helping companies who have themselves been, “stuck.” We have found that, for many companies, getting started with agile was not the challenge—but sustaining the transformation, and seeing it through to the end, was incredibly difficult.
Why?
Part of it has to do with the nature of organizational transformation, especially when it comes to early wins. And part of it has to do with a misunderstanding of the scope of what needs to change.
Let’s start with the nature of organizational transformation. When initiating a transformation with wide scope, some things will be easier and quicker to change than others. For example, setting meetings for sprint planning and retros is fairly easy. Rethinking the entire company’s org chart, not so much.
What we have noticed is that easy things get changed first, and this delivers some early wins. Maybe delivery gets *a little* faster. Maybe the customer provides some key feedback that prevents a lot of future re-working. Whatever those early wins are, they make everyone think, “wow, this agile thing is easy!”
Pretty soon, though, that low-hanging fruit is gone. The organization has digested all the easy changes it can…but it’s not enough. The harder changes are not so obvious, and the transformation begins to slow down. After the euphoria of easy wins, this slow down creates anxiety and frustration, and things begin to spiral and stagnate.
The agile philosophy grew out of the world of software design and development, and that continues to be the focus of much agile re-organization today. Because of that, too many leaders assume that an agile transformation happens, for the most part, on development teams.
It is true that development is the lynchpin for many transformations—but it represents only a third of what needs to change. Your leaders, business teams, and delivery teams need to be a part of the transformation, too. I can’t tell you how many times we’ve seen teams in an organization make a great transition towards Agile, only to be hamstrung by managers and leaders who continued to put constraints on them based on an older work model.
Indeed, there is an entire “value chain” involved in delivering products to your users, and your developers are just one integral part of that chain. Our webinar on this topic gives you a simple tool for inspecting this value chain—highly recommended as a first step in diagnosing where your transformation is currently “stopped up.”
After all, there is only so much development teams can do by themselves. If the rest of the organization does not change with them, the transformation will be largely incomplete, and no further changes with the development team will be able to move things along.
When agile transformations get stuck, organizations don’t see the benefits that such a transformation promises: Adaptability, customer satisfaction, quicker time to market, etc. Those who brought change to the organization struggle, hoping to find the magic elixir that will make everything better again. Those who aren’t as invested give up: “I guess Agile just wasn’t for us!” they say.
To avoid this fate, and to get your transformation moving again, we recommend getting a handle on a few things:
Remember, transformation constipation can happen to anyone. Get checked out, make a few lifestyle changes, and you will soon be on the road to recovery.