Viewing entries tagged
Trust

Spider Senses

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Spider Senses

I have a colleague, agile coach, change agent, and friend who recently shared a story with me. It got me thinking about his situation from multiple perspectives.

But before I get into that, let me share a little context first.

Paul, not his real name, was leading an agile transformation in a company. He didn’t have a lot of positional authority, but he felt he was integrated sufficiently with senior leadership in technology and product to make things work.

He was unexpectedly invited to a meeting with his boss last week and he was fired. It was a complete and utter surprise.

The party line was that his role was being made redundant because they were taking another approach to their agile transformation (another model, framework, philosophy). But the abruptness of the dismissal belied that claim.

Paul felt that, in hindsight, he hadn’t been meeting organizational expectations around the transformation, but at the same time, nobody had had the courage to give him any clear feedback to that effect. Nor any mentoring or coaching to help him better achieve the organization’s goals.

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Teams Provide Data AND Leaders Provide Trust

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Teams Provide Data AND Leaders Provide Trust

Perhaps you’ve heard some of these statements from your leadership teams over the years? I certainly have…

Bring me sufficient data to convince me of your idea

I have information you don’t have that is driving my decisions

Don’t think, just do your job

It’s above your pay grade

You don’t have a need to know

I get paid to make these decisions, you don’t

Don’t bring me problems, bring me solutions

You’re either part of the solution or part of the problem…

I was in a conference session a few weeks ago. We were talking about the balance many agile organizations struggle with between investing in—

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Core Scrum Values & Courage

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Core Scrum Values & Courage

The five Core Scrum Values have been defined as:

  1. Commitment
  2. Openness
  3. Focus
  4. Respect
  5. Courage

The reference I’m using for this include a blog post by Mike Vizdos here. And you can see them articulated on the Scrum Alliance site here.

Tobias Mayer wrote a counterpoint blog post on these values and suggested a different set and focus all his own. Here’s what Tobias had to say:

 

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