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Your Path To Agility

May 19, 2023

The Creating Agile Organizations approach is about designing your own organizational framework and coaching its adoption. It is important to note that it is different from frameworks like Scrum, LeSS or SAFe, which have specific structures, rules, events, and artefacts to build upon. Instead, Creating Agile Organizations provides none of that, but provides two sets of guidelines that draw upon decades of academic research and practical experience in organizations similar to yours.

Study First then Apply The Guidelines

The first set of guidelines focuses on Agile Organization Design, which helps you create a customized model that aligns with your specific context. By studying your organization and understanding its current situation, you can gather valuable data to use in applying these guidelines. This process starts with the customer and user and identifies the necessary organizational elements (teams, people, processes) required to deliver value and make an impact. Furthermore, you can use the guidelines to design product groupings that are effective in your specific context.

The second set of guidelines is about coaching, which plays a vital role in preparing the organization for change, launching the adoption of the new framework, and providing support to teams and leadership. These guidelines are essential for successful implementation and transformation within the organization.

To further illustrate these guidelines, let’s address a few common questions that we often hear:

  1. How should the larger organization be structured?

To determine your optimal structure, it is necessary to study how work functions within your organization, considering factors such as revenue streams, product definition and interdependencies (functional coupling) between departments. By minimizing functional coupling between departments you reduce goal conflicts, unnecessary coordination, and improve agility. Working from the outside in (starting with customers’ and user needs) you define your products and all units required to develop, sustain and enhance them. Once those are clear, you then decouple the product groups so they can operate semi-autonomous within the larger organization. 

  1. Which skills should be allocated to each team?

To determine the appropriate skill allocation, it is important to study the types (reciprocal, pooled, sequential) and the intensity of dependencies between skills needed to deliver value. Additionally, assessing cognitive load, feedback loops, and flow efficiency can help determine which functions should be included in your cross-functional teams.

  1. How should shared services and platforms be managed?

To address shared services and platforms, a careful analysis of the essential parts within the product groupings is necessary. These essential parts cannot be separated without losing the ability to deliver on the product group purpose, much like removing an engine from a car.

Two Levels of Agility

Agility, as defined by Mike Beedle, refers to an organization’s ability to adapt to new conditions and change its direction while maximizing value and enhancing the customer experience. This definition encompasses agility at two distinct levels within an organization.

Firstly, it addresses agility at the overall organizational level. This level focuses on the organization’s capacity to realign resources and functions in line with evolving management strategies, whether in response to proactive or reactive changes in the environment. Such flexibility enables the organization to capitalize on opportunities by initiating, combining, or discontinuing products or services.

The second level, often discussed in the agile community, is about the adaptability of products or services themselves. It answers the question of how a product or service can effectively respond to changing market demands and meet evolving user needs in a timely manner.

Creating Agile Organizations addresses both levels of agility by designing loosely coupled product groups. 

Figure 0. Loosely coupled Product Groups with shared services.

Let’s delve into agility at the overall organizational level as an example.

Multidimensional Organization Design

The concept of a semi-autonomous product group, as detailed in the book “Creating Agile Organizations,” is an example of a multidimensional organization design. In a multidimensional organization, input units (e.g. HR providing input to other units), output units (e.g. units producing product), and market units (e.g. sales) exist at each level of the organizational structure. The importance of each unit is determined based on its contribution to the organization’s business objectives.

Figure 1: A simplified view of multi-dimensional organization design

By having input, output, and market units at every level, a multidimensional organization can effectively respond to changing market conditions. It can modify product offerings, marketing strategies, and operational processes without necessitating a complete restructuring. How? Through resource allocation aligned with the relative importance of each unit, the organization can optimize performance and achieve its strategic goals. No structure change is needed.

Furthermore, this setup also promotes integration and collaboration across various functions and disciplines. It encourages cross-functional teamwork, alignment, and communication to attain shared objectives within a product group or service group.

Figure 2. A simplified example of Product Group design

Implementing a multidimensional organization design in your company requires studying, gathering data, and applying the provided guidelines to tailor it to your specific context.

Safety of a Framework Or Build Your Own?

Creating Agile Organizations does not have fixed structures, rules, events, or artefacts. Instead, it is about using data to apply guidelines and design for your unique context. 

Is this approach without risks? No, in case you want to minimise risks at the cost of team ownership and tailoring to your needs, opting for a framework might be more suitable. However, if your organization aspires to ambitious long-term goals and seeks to co-create with its teams, then Creating Agile Organizations is a worthwhile consideration.


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