Founder's Mentality Blog
The Micro-battles Learning (Training) Agenda
The Micro-battles Learning (Training) Agenda
Forum-based learning is critical to ensure that change efforts stay on track.
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Founder's Mentality Blog
Forum-based learning is critical to ensure that change efforts stay on track.
Micro-battles are microcosms of the company you want to become and are designed to promote transformational change from the inside out. Consequently, you need to build in training and coaching for everybody from the executive committee (Exco) to the members of the micro-battle teams.
By design, micro-battle training is an ongoing journey. It is an iterative process that combines both hands-on fieldwork and a set of workshop-style forums. In the field, teams “learn by doing”—solving real problems, facing real moments of truth and trying on new behaviors in the real world. As such, field training provides the most powerful and lasting learning experience, especially as Leadership and Win-Scale teams forge a new style of working together. But forum-based learning is also critical to ensure the effort stays on track. This involves facilitated workshops where people come together to reflect on lessons learned, trade observations, address obstacles and initiate action. Forums also help prevent backsliding into old habits as leaders and micro-battle teams adjust to new behaviors.
Want to learn more about the journey to scale insurgency? Explore the Bain Micro-battles System℠, step by step.
Ground zero for this forum-based training is the learning center—a room devoted to collecting and codifying what the organization is shooting for and what it is learning from its micro-battle portfolio. One wall of the room lays out the aspiration (what your company would look like as a scale insurgent). The others track your progress toward that aspiration. Every month, the micro-battle teams meet here with senior leadership for review sessions to analyze results, raise concerns, keep track of resources and celebrate victories. It is also a dedicated space for teaching both senior executives and micro-battle teams how to engage in this new and dynamic management system.
There are two fundamental aspects of the micro-battles training agenda:
Foundational elements. These are core modules that are required to get the basics right and set up and run the Bain Micro-battles SystemSM.
Micro-battle and Leadership team trainings. These are key sessions to help the micro-battle teams and the Exco build the skills and behaviors needed to run micro-battles successfully.
Let’s take a closer look at the content for both of these aspects (see Figure 1).
The micro-battles journey is structured around four stages, each of which requires some grounding for the teams—this is what the foundational elements set out to do.
When the organization is embarking on the journey, there is often an innate sense that the Founder’s Mentality® is still relevant, yet not as strong as it was before. There is a lack of clarity on how big an issue this really is, and whether others feel the same way. The critical goal of the foundational elements is to unite the Leadership team on the point of departure and the point of arrival, then uncover some of the big steps to get there.
We recommend two foundational modules, or working sessions, at this stage.
Objective: Introducing the Founder’s Mentality journey, establishing the point of departure, and aligning the Leadership team on the extent and urgency of the change needed.
Participants: Leadership team.
Key topics:
Objective: Uniting leadership around a common point of arrival by defining what the company will look like as a scale insurgent and what it will act like as it regains its sense of mission and Founder’s Mentality.
Participants: Leadership team, potentially with a subset of the franchise players.
Key topics:
Having established the overall ambition and point of departure, the next step is to identify the most important micro-battles that you want to pursue and scope them out. The next two modules help the Leadership team build out the micro-battles roadmap (which will get refreshed over subsequent cycles), and set out the initial hypothesis on deliverables for the working teams.
Objective: Learning how to define and choose micro-battles while creating the conditions for them to succeed.
Participants: Leadership team, potentially with a subset of the franchise players.
Key topics:
Objective: Defining the initial micro-battle mission, creating the micro-battle team and articulating a repeatable model for scaling. The goal is to give the new micro-battle team a point of departure, including a clear sense of what the first few Agile sprints will look like.
Participants: Leadership team, potentially with the micro-battle leads, if already identified.
Key topics:
Once the micro-battles are underway, the next two modules aim to help the working teams and the Leadership team gather at a couple of forums to solve specific issues and reflect on what they learned from each sprint.
Objective: These are less formal, hands-on sessions devoted to ensuring that micro-battle teams turn learning into a habit. They focus more on the quality of the discussion and insights, and less on PowerPoint slides and status updates. Team members practice giving and receiving feedback. They share their work, collect feedback from the prototype and co-create the plan for the next sprint. They learn how to discuss their results objectively and openly, rather than protecting themselves or defending their point of view. They also receive training in how to challenge the Leadership team and ask for what they need to make the micro-battle a success.
Participants: Micro-battle teams, with the option of having the Leadership team sponsor join one to two of these sessions.
Key topics:
These are crucial sessions in a micro-battle process. They bring the micro-battle and Leadership teams together and create a forum where everyone has to role model the desired behaviors of a scale insurgent, while evaluating the prototype and learning from each sprint.
Objective: Co-creating solutions to accelerate micro-battle results, while drawing out the broader implications of this learning for the rest of the company.
Participants: Leadership (Amplify) team and micro-battle leads.
Key topics:
For one large telco, the first Leadership team review was an eye-opener—even for a company deeply committed to the Founder’s Mentality and the journey toward scale insurgency. The CEO and executive committee were clearly aligned on the company’s insurgent mission: Redefining data connectivity through pervasive, high-quality network access and services. Yet putting micro-battle training into action raised a number of important lessons. Here are a few:
For both leadership and the micro-battle team, the micro-battles approach comes to life in two training sessions. These sessions are geared to equip the teams to actively lead micro-battles, manage the portfolio and learn new ways of working.
As we have seen, one of the Leadership team’s early objectives is to find the first failure point for each micro-battle and then propose a micro-battle mission to address it. But this is really just a well-informed hypothesis; it is up to the micro-battle team to gather the hard evidence. The team’s first objective, in fact, is to confirm whether or not members agree with the proposed prototype and repeatable model. The team must then test these hypotheticals in front of customers using Agile principles and ways of working.
This means the initial training for micro-battle teams focuses on how to crack tough problems quickly, using rapid test-and-learn cycles. But the training must also focus on how to scale solutions and new behaviors to the broader organization. This is the essence of the Win-Scale model—it often requires difficult shifts in how the teams interact with leadership.
Objective: Learning to solve problems using an Agile approach, which requires a very different mindset. Teams need to embrace repeated cycles of trying, failing and learning, while collaborating to build on each other’s strengths. This training uses a series of interactive exercises to introduce the basics of working in Agile, while coaching the team on such topics as how to make problems smaller and how to solve the specific first, before debating the ideological.
Participants: Micro-battle teams, with the option for the Leadership team sponsor to attend.
Key topics:
As the teams are trained, trainers should point out a few important principles and things to watch for:
One specific goal of running a micro-battle portfolio is to change fundamentally the behaviors of the company’s most senior leaders. At its most basic, this means replacing the traditional command-and-control approach with one based on empowerment and trust. Much of this involves learning how to get out of the way—how to facilitate rather than dictate. Top executives need to be role models for new behaviors, listen closely to the micro-battle teams and give energy to those teams by removing obstacles in their way. The goal is to make problems smaller, not bigger, so the micro-battle teams are in the best position to execute quickly and effectively.
Needless to say, this is a major adjustment for many leadership teams. The Amplify training helps leaders explore topics in two main categories: “hardware,” or the nuts and bolts of setting up a micro-battle portfolio, and “software,” topics focused on the changes to mindset and behaviors that leaders must undergo to make the Micro-battles System work. They are intended to occur after the Leadership team has done the core strategy work that lays the foundation for the company’s journey to full potential.
Objective: Using exercises and role-playing to help the Leadership team become better at managing the portfolio of micro-battles and governing them. This is where the Leadership team will likely have to stretch the most in adopting new behaviors, because it involves both new leadership skills and new learning skills.
Participants: Leadership team (or a subset of it).
Key topics:
Every company’s experience is, of course, different, and Leadership teams need to structure the training agenda to reflect their company’s unique circumstances. It should be tailored according to the company’s position on its journey to scale insurgency and the context it faces financially, organizationally, culturally and in terms of leadership readiness.
Think back to our previous telecom example. What rings true is that the effectiveness of micro-battle training results from a rich combination of hands-on field experience and a set of open, facilitated forum discussions in the learning center. Learning about new behaviors is one thing; living them is another. But as the telco discovered, embracing change can improve business rapidly and transform a company’s ways of working. Micro-battles unlock an enormous amount of energy and enthusiasm, and that is the best measure of success.
Bhavya Nand Kishore is the global practice director in Bain’s Strategy practice and is based in Zurich. Peter Slagt is a partner in the Kuala Lumpur office of Bain & Company and a member of the firm’s Global Results Delivery® practice.
Bain Micro-battles System℠ is a service mark of Bain & Company, Inc.
Micro-battles solve problems by challenging the old ways of doing things.