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How to manage dysfunctionality with agile methods

How to manage dysfunctionality with agile methods

“Hooray, we have a board and we are doing standups. We are agile!” That would be nice. Many people still think of a board with colourful stickies when they think of agility. And it’s perfectly clear: Visualizing work and workflows on a board is basically a great thing and an important prerequisite for improvement. However,

“Hooray, we have a board and we are doing standups. We are agile!”

That would be nice.

Many people still think of a board with colourful stickies when they think of agility. And it’s perfectly clear: Visualizing work and workflows on a board is basically a great thing and an important prerequisite for improvement. However, many “Hooray Agilists” still don’t understand that more brain fat is necessary in order to fully utilize the real benefits of agility. This is what happens in many companies: Every team has its own board and uses it to push and pull its tasks back and forth. In some cases even the management team has its own board and manages its tasks on it. If the management also has a board, some already interpret this as enterprise agility or business agility.

Two things are wrong here:

The fact that there are certain artifacts like boards or standups does not make an organization agile. Boards of all kinds – Kanban, Scrum or anything else – can be used to perfectily manage existing dysfunctions.

This happens when the focus is not on “business agility” and instead the methods are worshiped as “agile”. Everything then revolves around how many columns and swimlanes a board may have and whether a stand-up should not last a second longer than 15 minutes. You can make great but completely useless retros if you don’t follow the findings or if you never check whether actions were successful.

Where means and ends are confused, agile transformation intentions usually fall into the trap.