Agile Management is an iterative approach to project management based on adaptive methods pioneered by Japanese manufacturers and popularized by software developers.
Agile Management is an iterative approach to project management based on adaptive methods pioneered by Japanese manufacturers and popularized by software developers. Today, executives apply Agile project management techniques to a broad range of activities, including innovations in products and services, processes, and business models, in a wide variety of industries. Agile Management brings the most valuable innovations to market faster and with lower risk while improving team engagement and customer satisfaction. Scrum is the most common Agile Management approach, though methods such as Kanban, Lean Development, and Product Management are also common.
Usage and satisfaction among survey respondents
As companies become more mature in their Agile practices and scale agility to more areas, leaders may find they need to adapt many elements of their business, including:
Developing leaders who deeply embrace Agile project management and lead by example
Instilling Agile values everywhere, including operations and support functions
Designing a customer-centric operating model supported by clear accountabilities, simple structures, decisive governance, and simple processes
Defining a dynamic strategic planning and budgeting process to shift resources more quickly in response to change
Adjusting hiring and talent management systems to attract and retain top talent
Making technology systems more modular to allow frequent releases
How Is Agile Management Implemented?
How Agile Management works:
The leadership team identifies and rigorously sequences the opportunities for Agile innovation.
Executives assemble small, multidisciplinary, self-governing teams to address the top opportunities.
An “initiative owner” works with the team to establish a vision, develop and perpetually prioritize a more detailed list of potential opportunities, figure out when and how to tackle those opportunities, and ensure tangible results. A process facilitator coaches the team in Agile methods, removes barriers, and accelerates progress.
The multidisciplinary team creates a roadmap, breaks complex problems into more manageable tasks, and focuses on the most important opportunities. The team works in short, iterative cycles (often called sprints) to create working prototypes.
Customers who are collaborating closely with the team test the working prototypes and provide clear and rapid feedback on their true preferences. The team then adapts its approach to capitalize on this customer feedback.
The team continually identifies opportunities to improve its effectiveness.
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