Etude
For Financial Services Firms, Time for Agile Methods to Bust Through IT Walls
For Financial Services Firms, Time for Agile Methods to Bust Through IT Walls
Broader benefits hinge on orchestrating real IT business-unit collaboration.
Etude
Broader benefits hinge on orchestrating real IT business-unit collaboration.
The past year or so has seen a significant increase in companies using Agile practices outside the traditional IT domain. Agile adoption in non-IT lines of business has doubled in 2021 from the year-earlier period, Digital.ai reports.
Many companies have come to recognize that they can continuously improve products and services by employing the Agile method, which creates small, cross-functional teams that operate in short “sprints” to develop and test solutions to discrete problems. Yet Agile development within banks, insurers, and other financial services firms traditionally has originated and remained in technology departments. These firms have struggled to assemble truly cross-functional teams, composed of both business and IT people, and gather all of the competencies required to deliver working solutions every few weeks. The orchestration challenge is not trivial.
Expanding Agile beyond the IT incubator is a critical feature of high-performing Agile enterprises. In Bain’s Agility Quotient survey of more than 1,000 companies, the vast majority of top-performing companies agree that “our technology people are proficient enough on business and strategy—and our business people are versed in technology topics.”
Consider the experience of a global insurer. The IT department was an early adopter of Agile ways of working, adjusting its internal operating model while preserving established processes and interfaces with the rest of the organization. Each team was led by a proxy product owner—an IT member who gathered business needs and fed IT teams.
Although Agile methods within IT made for shorter cycles in project development, testing, and sometimes deployment, the insurer kept Agile in the IT silo. Several problems have persisted:
The early successes of Agile in IT, combined with the desire to address the persisting challenges, led the company to pilot end-to-end agility on a small set of initiatives that will catalyze a broader transformation.
For companies that have successfully expanded Agile out of the IT silo, the benefits have been substantial. A large UK bank has been rolling out a cross-functional model throughout its business areas, with dramatic results: Over a 3-year period, the bank’s Net Promoter Score℠ has risen 5 points, employee engagement scores have risen by 9 points, the cost-to-income ratio has dropped by one-third, and the return on equity has more than doubled.
Several reasons typically account for the slow transition to fully cross-functional Agile teams. When the head of IT for a pan-European bank’s local entity sought to expand Agile practices beyond the technology group, he faced significant hurdles:
Fortunately for this bank, the group COO, the entity CEO, and the executive committee had learned enough about Agile in other industries that they saw the potential of integrating business and IT into cross-functional Agile teams. They were convinced this would yield benefits in speed, quality, cost, and customer satisfaction.
The bank’s expansion from Agile in IT to Agile throughout the enterprise took place in three phases.
Establishing the foundations. Business leaders of the bank developed a taxonomy of customer experiences, which guided the organization of Agile teams. At the same time, the technology architects assessed the readiness of IT assets, sorting them into three categories (see Figure 1):
Organizing around IT assets’ Agile readiness. Based on the taxonomy of customer experiences and Agile maturity of IT assets, the bank’s business and IT teams started to reorganize. Cross-functional teams were established to handle the more Agile IT assets. Some existing IT teams focused temporarily on modernizing assets that weren’t fully Agile-ready, then transitioned into cross-functional teams. Other IT teams remained focused on IT assets that didn’t need to be managed by cross-functional teams.
Across all the teams, the bank established “communities” of people with common technical or business expertise, led by a senior individual of the community, and reporting to their respective functional leader. For instance, IT-related communities composed of analysts, developers, and testers report to leaders in the IT function, while business-related communities such as product owners, marketers, and user-interface designers report to leaders in the business functions.
Pushing the broader Agile agenda. Achieving the full benefits of agility at scale required the IT department and the whole bank to embrace a much broader change agenda than just setting up Agile teams.
To cite a few examples, the bank needed to use technology to accelerate development work, through standard and cutting-edge components, application programming interfaces, and other means. The general mindset had to shift from “projects” to a “product teams and backlogs.” Agile management processes had to catch on at the corporate level, in order to make decisions on strategic priorities, budgets, and other issues. Rather than waiting to review and amend project requirements, the support functions had to actively contribute to sprint planning and backlog refinement. Moreover, Agile practices had to involve the network of external suppliers.
Early pilots of these cross-enterprise Agile initiatives demonstrated a clear potential for the bank to achieve its ambitions on revenues, profits, and employee engagement.
Throughout an Agile transformation, the role of the IT organization typically gets reshaped according to six themes (see Figure 2): defining the overall technology strategy; supplying and upgrading the skills of IT talent across Agile teams; overseeing technology activities performed by Agile teams to ensure compliance with strategy and quality standards; supplying and operating the required technology infrastructure; developing the tools and frameworks to facilitate the IT work performed by Agile teams; and enhancing and maintaining the less-Agile IT assets.
Agile may have taken root in the IT function of financial services firms, but now it needs to bust through the walls. An end-to-end Agile operating model depends on close collaboration of technology and business units. Strong sponsorship by senior executives will be required to help the organization navigate this transition, but it’s well worth the effort.
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