The wealth of nations, the success of agile requires courage and Adam Smith. |
One of my most popular blog posts talked about why some firms resist the agile mindset. I place the blame upon a lack of psychological safety at most large organizations. Additionally, I blamed the fear and uncertainty, which is inherent in a global company. These factors combined create a toxic stew where everyone does the bare minimum and tires to remain invisible until they leave the company. It is depressing and resembles the grim environment of a Franz Kafka story.
To address the alienation and lack of initiative which festers in this environment, managers, put into place processes which if followed, have a better chance of yielding better results. The processes become rituals and deviation from these rituals creates a reaction similar to blasphemy in the middle ages. The process becomes the purpose of the organization. In reality, the mission of any business is to create products and services which help customers. Helping a customer creates revenue, and revenue should generate profit. The description above has existed since Adam Smith and remains the best articulation of capitalism we have. I think many people who work in business forget the simple principle of serving customers leads to profit.
The early days of software development reflected the spirit of Adam Smith. Business people learned software development, and they used computers to address business concerns. The first generation of programmers were the ones who helped automate payroll systems; they created the Saber travel system and provided the mathematics necessary to make the space program successful. As computing became, more complex and specialized business, people began to abdicate their involvement in the systems which automated their business. Project managers became go-betweens technology and business professionals. Projects got more prominent, and the failures got bigger. Millions of people had their potential squandered.
It was this waste of human capital, which leads to the creation of the agile manifesto. I am part of the reformation which began on a ski trip to Utah. Many things unite us, but the main trait we all have is courage. We all dare to go into the office each day and make a difference. We are courageous enough to point out areas of improvement. The agile reformation relies on the courage to be visible and vulnerable to our peers. It takes courage to bet your career each day to make improvements. It is easy to become invisible at a large organization; it takes courage to make changes.
I hope that I can maintain this courage for the remainder of my career.
Until next time.
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