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An Overview of Agile Team Design

Jun 16, 2017 12:39:00 PM / by Paul Friedman

Paul Friedman

Transforming to an agile software delivery model is filled challenging, especially when you are working in an organization of a large scale. In large organizations, one of the most common practices to improve efficiency is to build an organization of specialists. Every specialist knows how to get their specific tasks done in the best way possible. Additionally, large companies typically have very large and complex software architectures for their systems. Between the specialists and the complex architectures, getting the entire solution delivered can be inefficient since it takes so much planning, effort, money, and time to get anything delivered. 

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The most intrusive inefficiency with these organizational models is that they are not designed with support for natural delivery flow.

Because of this, when transforming to a scaled agile model, there are specific guiding principles that can help determine the best organizational design to make your move to agility most effective. If planned and implemented properly, this agile transition will allow you to get the most business value delivered.

 

In order of importance, these principles are:


 

  1. Organize around flow – Flow starts where the business intent is generated. So, you need to first figure out where the empowered decision makers in your business are living. Generally, if you are in a large company, there will be many “Business Intent Generators” (or BIG’s) to identify. True flow in your solution delivery will most readily break out if you connect the BIG’s directly with the team members with the skills and knowledge needed to build the solutions that meet the business intent. By connecting the BIG’s with the right team members, you maximize collaboration with the business and reduce information needing to take hops across teams in the company.
  2. 7 +/- 2 member teams – There are numerous writings about the benefits of moving to delivery teams that are small, between 5 and 9 people. Beyond the most well-known benefit of reducing communication complexities associated with large team sizes, small teams foster the culture of commitment to achieving short-term goals which is harder to break out in large teams.
  3. Start journey towards flexible teams – When you start with an organization of specialists, you need to organize your teams so that you start making progress in creating an organization of generalizing specialists. By building up these more flexible team members, you improve the probability that someone on the team has the knowledge and skills to get any particular business intent turned into a solution, and therefore, the team does not need to reach outside itself to deliver. As the team members are more flexible, the pressures on having larger-sized teams diminish as well. There are two key paths to begin the journey towards flexible teams. First, you need to put people with differing knowledge and skills on the same team and then provide them the time (and potentially reduced expectations for actual delivery) so that they can concentrate time on knowledge sharing and capture. Second, you need to work on simplifying and consolidating your software architectures to reduce the learning curve for team members to pick up new skills and knowledge.
  4. Build continuous improvement teams – The move to agile requires support for rapid development and refactoring. This support includes continuous integration (CI) systems, agile configuration management (CM), rock solid environment provisioning and support, test automation tooling and governance, and agile release management. Many of these support roles are best filled with folks that understand these practices. However, for example, you could find some smart developers who are fed up with the lack of CM, CI, and environments. These developers would very passionately get a first round of these practices and tools in place to get you started. The main point here is that you do not forget to get these support roles funded right away and create continuous improvement teams to “catch” backlog to build these support tools and systems for the efficiency and effectiveness of the whole solution delivery organization.

 

With these guiding principles, you can organize your teams for agility. That being said, because you are starting this transition as a large solution delivery organization filled with specialists, it will be difficult to adhere to all of these steps immediately. Do not let this hinder the beginning of your transition, as making continuous improvements is one of the key principles of agile.  


Learn more about building and strengthening an agile organization here:

Strengthen your Agile Organization

 

 

 

Interested in training to help advance your agile journey? Click the button to view our current list of public training courses! Use code BLOG10 for 10% off!

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Topics: Agile, Agile Team Design

Written by Paul Friedman

Paul is a results-oriented IT leader, software engineer, agile enthusiast, and technical expert with extensive experience in architecture, design, development, testing, and deployment of state-of-the-art software applications.

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