To understand why so many people around the world have adopted Agile as their first and foremost guide to improvement, we must first look at why leadership has been failing us in the first place.
Many in the modern world equate leadership to a highly visible role. A leader is a spokesperson. Their suave charisma is infectious, and following their mantra is made easy.
No one can deny that they are not impressed when a sharply dressed leader bounds onto the stage at a conference. They use impressive statistics to back up claims that ‘if we just did this, then the world would be a better place’.
Reality is rarely as static as those brief moments of exuberance.
The truth is, it takes years or even decades to build and shape companies. The charismatic hand-gesturing of the modern world leader (especially in technology) does not go far in the grand scheme of things. Changing an approach that has been ingrained in us is hard work. So is undoing bad habits and helping people build new habits.
What purpose then does Agile serve to help us with this task of getting better and why should you, as a leader, care?
Leaders leave a legacy that is stronger than when you first started.
You must provide leadership that is ingrained within the culture of the organization you leave behind. Being Agile and thinking in an Agile way allows us to be transparent and honest. We learn from our mistakes without fear of retribution and scorn. That in itself is a huge shift in the way we think.
One of the Agile Manifesto principles states:
“Build projects around motivated individuals. Give them the environment and support they need, and trust them to get the job done.”
The concept is simple. It implies that you, as a leader, need to act in a supporting role. Encourage acts of leadership in others. Don’t focus on the mistakes. Create an environment where work, and even innovation, can happen.
“Culture eats strategy for breakfast”
There probably won’t be a single defining moment in a successful project. No one can say: that was the moment where you as a leader made all the difference in a project. But slowly, over several months of sustained support and Agile thinking, you will positively affect the culture of the organization.
As the late management guru Peter Drucker said, “Culture eats strategy for breakfast.” He implies that no amount of people managing would be more positive than the intrinsic motivation people have to succeed in their work.
Kiichiro Toyoda, the founder and first president of the Toyota Motor Corporation, created and espoused the Toyota Production System (TPS). He built it on the Lean production perspective. In this management philosophy, he believed that because people operate the system, the strategy to success has to be a people-oriented system. TPS respects the fact that only the people on the production-line can make the changes necessary for improvement.
This is where Agile leadership should focus.
Moreover, the culture of excellence has to become ingrained in the line worker. ‘Good enough’ is no longer a workable philosophy.
What can you do as a leader to make the change happen?
John Kotter, the well-known thought leader in business leadership, writes about the ways that change management can be ‘made-to-stick’. Establishing a need and creating visibility are at the forefront of what he espouses.
Creating transparency allows us to understand the current situation. Only then can we begin to tackle the problems with a frank and consolidated effort. Mistakes will ensue. However, in an environment of learning, where mistakes are opportunities for improvement, success will undoubtedly follow.
At BERTEIG, our coaching and consulting approach is to support leadership in this endeavour.
Almost every great leader has had the support of a non-judgemental partner to help them achieve more. We take your success as our success. We believe that the legacy of your company will therefore be in the Agile way that people work.
Be sure to think about Agile leadership if you are given the responsibility to spearhead in any way; time has proven that it will not be the antiquated legacy systems in place that hold you back, it will be the legacy that you foster.
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This article was originally published on AgileAdvice.com in February 2019.
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