The corporate culture is a decisive factor when it comes to developing agile work processes. Managers have to empower their employees to self-organize – and thus relinquish some control. Agile methods demand flat hierarchies. Decisions have to be made collegially. Open communication and a transparent culture of learning from mistakes are also crucial: mistakes should be seen as opportunities. Only those who actually make mistakes can learn from them. Trust is important because agile working is usually experimental and self-organized. Mistakes happen in every experiment, so trusting relationships are essential both within the team and between employees and their managers.
Commitment, focus, openness and courage are key agile values to enable efficient and harmonious collaboration.
Agile working also relies on defining clear visions and concrete goals which, paired with autonomous teamwork, increase a company’s reactiveness and efficiency. In this open-ended process, it is rarely evident from the outset what the path to a solution will look like in practice. Instead, it should be clear to everyone what they want to achieve as a team. This requires a certain level of freedom and trust, but it allows companies to react appropriately to the growing complexity and dynamics of the business environment. The Lean UX approach plays a key role here, placing the user at the center of the process. This involves specific methods like Scrum or design sprints. These approaches to project management foster an iterative way of working built on learning cycles following the “Build – Test – Learn –“ principle, which allows mistakes to be detected early on and reduces the risk of failed developments.
Does everyone have to adopt agile ways of working now?
Not every solution to every problem needs to be worked out through agile methods. There are straightforward problems that are easy to solve without needing to resort to an agile work process. For example, if an invoicing system constantly produces the wrong bills, it probably makes sense to look for the malfunction directly. As a rule, the more complex the problem, the better suited agile processes are to solve it. In general though, I would say that agile principles, work cultures and mindsets are valuable for every business – although it should always be carefully considered whether the methods meet the needs of the relevant department or function within the company. Simply put, not everyone needs to work in a Scrum framework.
How can agile methods be used in the home office?
First of all, you need to have the right digital tools – and know how to use them. The major added value of agile working is its heavily team-oriented way of doing things, particularly in workshops. Especially in the COVID-19 era, when team members may not meet in person for several months, these methods foster cohesiveness. Agile working is about making things visible and tangible, which can also be helpful in the home office. By working from home, many people have learned to be better organized and this in turn enables agile working, which relies on the individual’s ability to self-organize.
The freedom that agile working creates within companies is motivating for employees because they get to take on more responsibility, which helps them identify better with the decisions that are made.
How can companies successfully evolve towards more agility?
Agile working helps organizations to move with the times, but there are often barriers to be overcome when it is implemented. Agile working should also be introduced to the business in an agile and user-centric way. There can be no one-size-fits-all strategy in this context.
When you want to engage an entire company with the topic of agile working, setting up pilot projects or innovation labs are popular and effective ways to make the methods practicable and to demonstrate their power in the real-life context of the organization‘s activities. Nonetheless, cultural change does take time and should be expected to take hold incrementally.