Difficulties Encountered With Large Agile Adoption
There are an increased number of posts about agile adoption not working out for some folks in larger companies. As the numbers of scrum / agile implementations sky rocket so too will the number of stories where agile is not succeeding. The following story is not surprising and I expect to hear more of these types of responses as agile / scrum grows in applied practice. What interests me is not weather agile is good or bad (I’m sold on the concepts.) but, what we can learn through evaluation, in other words let’s be empirical and study the data we have.
A great recent blog post by Vikas Hazrati caught my eye.
The story starts like this …
You have been feeling great. Recently, you met a lot of people in \the software community who knew little about Agile and you felt good telling them on how you are practicing Agile on your new project. You tell them about the wonders it has done to the business value delivered to the client and how your work life balance has improved since you started following Agile methodologies religiously. How you have felt so committed to the project that you are working on a that you have a great team of professionals.
So far so good.
The climax in the story comes on that dreaded Friday evening when the less committed people of the organization, which includes all of your team, are give the pink slip, and of course you are one of them!
You wonder, Why us, Why me, How the hell am I not committed? I thought that after years of developing software the wrong way this is the first time that you have done the things right, then why? The reason is that somehow your organization believes that you are not committed. Neither to the organization nor your work.
This is not a surprising outcome and all to common. Agile has gone mainstream but it will be attacked from many angles.
My Observations
The current systems are thought models, essentially living thought models, changing them is slow and painful. Like any living thing when it is attacked or challenged it will fight back and lash out in fear, anger, igonorance and for pure simple survival. The people defending the old tired models of thinking are simple acting reasonable from their frame of reference.
Additionally, for big companies to even recognize that they have an incredibly valuable asset in a well formed team is a huge step acknowledge that performing teams are capital assets. With a great team I can deploy it towards a challenging business problem and generate a myriad of ways to thrive. Knowledge is a commodity, it is the ability to do something useful with that knowledge that will distinguish these companies long term. Eliminating your good teams (capital assets) from the business is fiscally irresponsible and it will come back to haunt the organization.
Expect real change to take years. You can do things to dramatically accelerate this change but, you have to be very thoughtful about your approach. It will not rely solely on a rationalized conversation (i.e. 1+1 = 2) people just don’t care when it comes to habits and perceptions driven from an emotional bases. And like it or not we are most often dealing with emotional issues since our rationalizations are anchored by an emotional part of our brain. Intentionally changing behavior is a long haul propositioin and the scrum framework is an means to inspect and adapt a change state into existence.
- Doug
http://3back.com

September 2nd, 2010 at 3:29 am
I had to read your post three times to get the full meaning of it. I enjoy reading what you have to say. It’s unfortunate that more people do not comprehend the benefits of coaching. Keep up the good work.