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Introduction:
Empiricism (scrum) identify the three pillars as ‘Transparency’, ‘Inspection’ and ‘Adaptation’. On the face of it, these seem quite open and honest pillars. Do they allow for organisational culture that is [perhaps] not quite so clear? Is there a failure to accept the complexity of the real working environment that we call the norm?

Context is a challenging aspect in a work environment and a lot of assumptions can be made.

Lets start with some simple definitions of these three pillars;

Transparency – means facts are presented and available as they are, everyone involved are open in their day to day transactions / communications and news / updates (good or bad) is made clear and available to all and with no hidden agendas. (It shouldn’t be difficult to find something out).

Inspection – refers to inspection by everyone in the team (scrum) and refers to the product, the processes, people, practices and continuous improvement and means a critical investigation with the idea to identify any improvements that can be made as soon as possible. Everyone is responsible.

Adaptation – The response to the transparency and Inspection and the changes needed to respond to the analysis.

Looking back will help to gain perspective on just how far you have come.

Seems quite straightforward seeing it written down however in my own experience, this is perhaps the first and biggest stumbling block any organisation can face. The reality is always far more complex in the real world. For example, in a scrum team where does the transparency end? Do the team need to have an in depth understanding of every project that is in progress in the organisation or just the project that they are working on? How are the team and the stakeholders supposed to be transparent enough? Does ‘everyone’ need to come together on a daily bases and have a group update on every small thing the business is doing? The truth is that all this may be a possibility, it really depends on the project and just how far reaching it is for the organisation as a whole. There are no simple answers and the only way to be as clear as you can is to provide the opportunity to allow discussion.

How many of us have worked in an organisation where getting answers to questions from the organisation was harder than finding hens teeth? Some people tend to hold on to information and manage it like their secret power. You’ve heard the phrase ”Knowledge is power!”? There really are people who don’t like to share knowledge and they can be adept at justifying why this is the case to both themselves and to the organisation. It can be easy to tell yourself that it does not matter, that little bit of information but the reality is that it could be and the only person who can honestly judge that is the one person who may or may not need it. Transparency is a culture and it is really really challenging. In my experience the key here is effective stakeholder management (the subject for another blog).

Inspection is the next subject and once again it seems simple enough. The onus is on the whole team to inspect the product, the processes, the team, the outcomes like this is simply the easiest request ever. How often does something happen that was not considered and or planned for? In software development it tends to happen a lot. The developers are more than likely working on technology (code) they had nothing to do with originally and technology is always improving and changing, so how the new code will interact with the original code can be quite surprising / frustrating. Thankfully agile and lean practice have techniques to tackle inspection. Most people understand the concept of the retrospective, in my opinion, the most valuable event in scrum for many reasons. Retrospectives can be good or bad, the challenge is to make them effective. This can take time building on Commitment, Courage, Openness, Focus and Respect (those good old scrum values). Effective retrospectives will enable conversation and challenge the team. The value is identifying strategies to learn and improve.

This brings us to the adaptation. Everything up to now has little value if the adaptation phase is actioned. Identifying opportunities to improve mean nothing if there is no follow up to deliver the change needed. The key considerations here are;

a. Do we know what we need to do to make the required change and can we measure the success?

b. Can we make the suggested change (do we have the autonomy and or the desire)

c. Is there agreement (consensus) that the change is worthwhile?

d. Are we trying to make too many changes at once?

Seeing an opportunity for change does not mean the team know how to achieve it, sometimes it will take research and investment. For example I was working with a team that wanted to adapt to feature releases to achieve more frequent and safer delivery to the customer, however there were a lot of aspects needed to make this a reality including input from the business to adapt a CAB (Change Advisory Board) process to suit. There were some technical changes to the branch technology that needed to be carried out too. Is there consensus in the team? You don’t need everyone to agree but if the team make a decision (majority), then the team should work together to experiment. If one of the team disagrees because they have experienced this kind of change in the past (with another team), then this is no guarantee that in the current team it cannot work this time. Their experience may offer some valuable insights into a certain approach for example. Finally making too many changes at once is a recipe for confusion as it becomes more challenging to identify what change is impacting what. I joined a team that often did not hold retrospectives and when they did the suggestions for adaptation were numerous and the team felt pressured to record as many changes as they could because they were unclear as to when the next opportunity to adapt would come. This is where the capture of ideas and suggestions is a good starting point and the identification of the highest value change is advantageous. Creating a board where suggestions and ideas were not lost is valuable and the continual evaluation of these against new suggestions are important because you will find that some change will improve the situation elsewhere.

One final point here is that not all change is a success, some ideas fail and it is important to accept the risk and avoid any kind of blame game. By keeping changes small and reversible, you have a team that can truly be courageous and experiment with ideas and by evaluating the success (with metrics), confidence in the change can be built on.

Empiricism exists in nature and although it can seem confusing, the evidence is survival.

One final note from me on metrics. Be careful with metrics, they can cause as much harm than good, especially if there is a lack of transparency on their purpose. Metrics should exist throughout the organisation to measure a variety of functions and an organisation has a responsibility to remain transparent about the what and the why. It is also important in my opinion to allow for conversation on metrics and their value because often small changes can give better results. I would also advocate the allowance for teams to work out and gather their own metrics to prove their own successes. All too often metrics in KPI’s or OKR’s can be lazily sought out to try and compare team value without the consultation of the teams involved. This can lead to a culture of mistrust if the team feel that they are being micro-managed. For example, I worked in an organisation that watched daily captured hours within a team like a hawk and clumsily used these stats to constantly question the value being provided. If a team did not capture all their hours in a day then it was an indicator that they were not doing enough work, but the reality was that they were often being pulled from their planned work to rework old code which was not being captured on a task. The team refused to create tasks for every little bit of work done to justify their existence, which I understood and that was a battle I had with management continuously.

As a practitioner in AgilePM, a professional Scrum Master and working in the role of an Agile delivery manager, I don’t consider myself an expert. If I did I would probably remain lost in the sea of Agile experts. There are a lot. Although I’m unsure exactly what an expert is. Feel free to let me know if you have any insight.

The idea that ‘Agile’ is order is not respecting the environment where it operates.

I have mentioned before the belief that many people who consider themselves ‘Agilists’ do so to fit into the crowd without really getting the point. Another misconception about ‘Agile’, is its simplicity! It’s a piece of cake… Go away for a couple of days or a week on a course and the little bit of knowledge starts to open up the possibility of what it can produce. It it’s no secret that it can be an incredibly valuable method / mentality / idea / thing / whatever… It certainly seems to work well in a development / software environment, but it is far from simple when it comes to implementing it.

When you look at it as a Scrum team or other small team working towards a valuable product, it looks pretty simple, and those diagrams do a good job of making it appear simple, but that is their job.

The problem is though, ‘Agile’ does not operate in a sterile bubble, where communications are controlled on rails and everyone knows exactly what they and their whole team are doing down to the minuscule detail and management sit in their offices comfortable that the scrum team is producing immense value every iteration.

If only it was that simple…

Now, I don’t have the solutions for you, I told you I’m not an expert, all I do know is that I have looked at an organisation in. the past and said to myself, “Agile would really work well there!”, and then the real work begins. You don’t have to have a vision as to how it will ultimately look, because, the point is that true ‘Agile’ adapts to and around the team, as long as it’s understood and respected enough. I mean, have you ever truly thought about exactly what an empowered team looks like? It’s about the loss of control and ultimate trust, mountains of trust and that subject is a blog post in itself.

How many times have you managed a team that was a carbon copy of the team before?

Thats right and the primary reason a lazy, formulaic approach to ‘Agile’ will be doomed to fail, it will never get to perfection for more than a moment and some dynamic or other messes with it.

It will always and constantly need attention and love to succeed. It’s just not simple to organise a group of human beings into a performing team by just reading a few pages in a text book. It’s a challenge, a rewarding challenge at times, but a challenge all the same..

But, you know what? It might just be worth that effort…

‘No’ is one of the first words we learn, certainly it’s one of the first words we hear. Could this be the reason we don’t like to use it very often?

It can feel intimidating when being given more work but you can say ‘no’.

When it comes to our own productivity, it’s a word that we must get used to in order to reach anywhere near our own potential. When you don’t use ‘no’, you are actually giving up your own control of your time. Not using ‘no’, means ‘yes’. Well thats what people hear when they don’t hear ‘no’.

It’s actually a really hard word to use, it feels negative in an age where positivity and a ‘can do’ attitude is what we are constantly told is the only way to be. If you don’t say ‘no’, but a silent ‘yes’, you will never control your own time, and if you don’t control your own time, you can never be the best you can be.

The only person who can give you the authority to use the damn word is you.

Take a brief moment to think about it. You have been given another load of work by your boss, the fact it’s your boss makes it hard, right? Your boss is the reason you have a job in the first place, so it will feel hard. It’s a comfort zone and the only way to beat a comfort zone is to push through it. The more you say ‘no’, the easier it will become.

Of course, saying ‘no’, is usually a little more subtle than that, it’s probably not wise to just say it for the sake of it, that’s a path to unemployment… By controlling your own time, and making sure you are able to prioritise your work, you will be better prepared to say ‘no’ by telling your boss (or whoever is requesting your efforts), the reasons why you cannot. After all, by correctly managing your time, you will have prioritised your effort to the benefit of the business. What boss would not appreciate that?

So, saying ‘no’ on its own is clearly enough. It’s a piece of the larger puzzle, but the truth remains, you have to consider how you can say ‘no’, maintain your own credibility and be the leader of your own destiny.

Take your time, take a deep breath, consider your situation and be honest and bold.

Nature around the garden demonstrates efficient symbiosis. The importance of this connection is not visible or understood by everyone, but ignorance has no relation on it’s importance. Photographer: Mark Nesbit

Nature over time has created an effective and efficient interoperability. Without insects, flowers would not be pollinated, fruit would not grow and the future of these species would be in doubt.

In the business world, we need this level of connectivity, or expect it and more often than not assume it. We build teams, plan meetings and activities and pretty much assume that this is all automatically universally understood and absorbed.

Under the Covid19 restrictions, I see people sitting in more and more meetings, all from home, where we are surrounded by distractions (family issues, bored kids, noise, the broken dishwasher, the list never ends), however all those meetings (I had five yesterday) we are expected to maintain 100% focus. The formats are dull, unimaginative and often pointless or even worse, aimless! Then we are expected to act on them. It’s insanity at times.

Connections must be efficient and effective, otherwise they should be cut. This sounds easy, but often not. I have meetings on in the background as I continue to work now as they track the telephone numbers of those dialling in.

At the start of this Covid journey, I got it. A strange situation, people working from home, we needed to keep an eye on each others mental health, make sure everyone was engaged. The perils of isolation were identified early on.

You need an element of trust towards your work force. The flower doesn’t complain or sulk when a bee passes by without stopping. Another bee from the hive has or will pick up the nectar…

I mean that meetings are not the only way to communicate, there are more effective methods for certain things.

If any of your have your own Covid meeting stories, I’d love to hear them.