{"id":102,"date":"2011-06-28T13:25:02","date_gmt":"2011-06-28T13:25:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/benjaminmitchell.wordpress.com\/2011\/06\/28\/helping-overcome-impediments-between-managers-and-agile-teams\/"},"modified":"2011-06-28T13:25:02","modified_gmt":"2011-06-28T13:25:02","slug":"helping-overcome-impediments-between-managers-and-agile-teams","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/techpeoplethrivi-i2tkeoduos.live-website.com\/helping-overcome-impediments-between-managers-and-agile-teams\/","title":{"rendered":"Helping overcome impediments between Managers and Agile Teams"},"content":{"rendered":"

Agile teams often experience difficulties when they have to deal with problems that occur outside the team and may require management involvement to resolve. I\u2019ve seen several Agile teams lose motivation when they question whether managers are really committed to helping the team. Often the team struggle to be open with the manager about the perceived problems or how they could jointly come up with ways to improve the situation.<\/p>\n

Here\u2019s a hypothetical scenario based on my experience:<\/p>\n

Mike, the Development Manager at a small company, asked Alice, an Agile coach, to come in and help introduce Agile to his organisation, starting with the key development team.<\/p>\n

Alice ran some introductory workshops with Mike and the whole team. At the end of these sessions Mike told everyone “I’m really excited about the potential of Agile to help our organisation, starting with this team.\u00a0 I want to do all that I can to support it”<\/p>\n

When Alice came back to the organisation a few weeks later she found that the team were beginning to express doubts about how committed Mike was to adopting Agile. Mike had stopped coming to the daily stand-ups and worse, he wasn’t helping them remove the blockers they experienced with tasks that required a specialist user experience designer in another team.<\/p>\n

The team told Alice: \u201cMike\u2019s not doing anything to remove the delays caused by other teams. He says he supports Agile, but when we need him to help us out, he isn\u2019t there for us. Yet again, the problem is with management! There\u2019s no point us doing this Agile stuff if we\u2019re not supported\u201d<\/p>\n

Alice agreed with the team Mike\u2019s role is to help the team by overcoming organisational impediments. She decided to encourage Mike to attend the team\u2019s daily stand-up where she hoped he\u2019d recognise that the reasons for blocks which were causing delays on the tasks were things that he should help with. If Mike didn\u2019t see this for himself, Alice would then model this behaviour for Mike by asking \u201cWhat would it take to remove the blockers on those tasks? Would you benefit from help on those?\u201d If this fails then Alice would be more direct to Mike by asking \u201cWhat\u2019s your view on talking to the team about the blockers and seeing how you could help?\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

What’s your view of Alice’s approach to helping in this situation? Here’s my view – I welcome your thoughts if you see it differently.<\/p>\n