Better Ways of Working
Is Your Agile Transformation Just Agile Theater? š We have all seen it: A leader launches dozens of Scrum teams, but the underlying system remains the same.Ā š The result is often that the system eventually fights back and reverts to its old state. In the latest episode ofĀ Better Ways of Working, I sat down with Matthew Jacobs [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jacobsmatta/], Chief Product Owner at Scrum Inc. [https://www.linkedin.com/company/scrum-inc/], to discuss why most Agile transformations are actually operating model transformations in disguise šµļøāāļø. If you want agility to last longer than the leader who started the initiative, you must change the core blueprint of how your organization delivers value šļø. Key Takeaways from our conversation: The Snap-Back Effect:Ā Why transformations often fail the moment a new leader takes over š.Ā This occurs because the original organizational rules were never actually updated to support the new ways of working. Customer-Driven Value:Ā The importance of theĀ Golden Thread, which ensures every person in the organization understands how their daily work contributes to the overall mission š§µ. Modular Design:Ā Why a modular organizational chart is the only sustainable way to deliver work iteratively without becoming overwhelmed by coordination dependencies š§©. Principle-Driven Policy:Ā Moving away from check-the-box rules toward outcomes that provide teams with the freedom to innovate āØ. Agile is not just a method for managing software; it is a superior way of organizing to get any complex task doneāfrom viral research to aerospace engineering š.
28 episodes
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