Mon 22 Dec 2008
Lean and Agile on TechCrunch – join the debate
Jeff Windman posted a nice little article on TechCrunch IT about Lean, Agile, Rally and Toyota. Please join the deep and skeptical discussion.
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Mon 22 Dec 2008
Jeff Windman posted a nice little article on TechCrunch IT about Lean, Agile, Rally and Toyota. Please join the deep and skeptical discussion.
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Right now, we are all working through our 2009 budget process with the unknowns of the economic recession staring us in the face. This budgeting cycle holds more unknowns than we’ve seen in awhile, so it’s making everyone cautious about finding the right moves that will cut costs in the short term without damaging our businesses.
Unfortunately, layoffs may be part of the solution to achieving short-term savings, especially for firms hit hard by the recession. In short, layoffs suck. These highly personal actions are sad, and I am sure you and your staff may need some time to grieve the losses. But prior to cuts, there is a bigger issue to consider while managing belt tightening -– your long-term vision and direction. Put simply, it is imperative to refresh your 2009 vision before the cutbacks, or you risk destroying the morale of the whole team, losing key personnel, and dropping market share.
As you look to make cost-saving cuts, the first question is, how are you going behave?
On Nov. 9, Rahm Emanuel, the new chief of staff for President-elect Barack Obama said, “Rule one: Never allow a crisis to go to waste… They are opportunities to do big things.” Clearly Mr. Emanuel is reacting by rising to the occasion – scenario number 2.
The trick to taking advantage of this crisis is to resist the pressure to simply cut without a long-term plan that everyone understands. When you do not have long-term goals, short-term fixes always lead to unintended consequences that are typically worse than the original problem. Said another way: While we sometimes get some of the intended consequences, we always get all of the unintended consequences.
A key goal of every IT department is to reduce the time and effort needed to deliver value to the business. To accomplish this, the best long-term trend we have in IT beyond Moore’s law and the power of the Internet is the improvement of IT agility. Increasing IT agility is important because it provides a value innovation and delivery method that harnesses these fundamental advances in infrastructure.
Tom Poppendieck, a leader in the Lean IT movement, recently said, “You can’t cut costs by focusing on cutting costs. You’ve got to focus on the changes that will lower your costs over the long run.”
If you are exploring the adoption of agile software development practices and you’re prepared to rise to the occasion, this recession and the resulting belt-tightening gives you an opportunity. You have the opportunity to rally your company around a vision that will not just cut costs, but improve morale and help you grow your business in the next economic spring.
IT agility
For the 70% of you who have not adopted enterprise agility, let’s do a quick overview. Agile practices enable teams to build less, but return the same value by focusing on early delivery of the features that have the highest business value and not wasting money on the features that don’t.
IT agility is driven by three major innovations: agile development, Software as a Service (SaaS), and Web 2.0 social networks. However, without agility in development and software releases, the innovations of service-oriented architecture (SOA) and Web 2.0 are elusive.
There are three costs savings for enterprise IT agility proven through benchmarking analysis:
To realize those benefits, you and your team must develop, communicate and implement an effective agile enterprise adoption driven by a highly visible roadmap. Since the late 90s, agile adoptions have followed a ground-up and incremental funding approach as early adopters proved the benefits and scalability of agile in the enterprise. Starting in 2005, leadership-led or top-down approaches have begun to dominate the scene. These larger and more systemic approaches are required for organizations that need to act fast to derive short-term gains.
For managers and directors doing their budget planning now, the next three sections outline the proof points for agile, a roadmap to enterprise agility, and the implications on this roadmap from having to make savings cuts ahead of investment.
Proven impact of enterprise IT agility
Many large and distributed development organizations have proven the positive financial impact of agile over the past five years. These findings were quantified in the Agile Impact Report. In that study, QSM Associates benchmarked Agile teams against a database of 7,500 projects and delivered the following results. On average agile teams working with Rally were 25% more productive, had 50% faster time to market, and delivered one-fourth the number of defects. (Those teams not working got 50% of those results.)
Given those improvements, it is becoming a business imperative to adopt agility, especially on your mission-critical applications. In the face of cuts and with a long-term outlook toward enterprise agility, you can now see your way to a 25% savings in 2009.
Enterprise agile adoption roadmap
Like any mission-critical systems or initiative, you need a vision and roadmap to steer your adoption and rally the troops. During the past four years, an approach fashioned from Lean manufacturing concepts and adopted in an incremental approach has proven very effective. The following illustration depicts that method.

There are three keys to effectively managing this process:
Many of these rollouts have started with a grassroots effort to get to Step 1 and Step 2. With the help of external coaching and parallel tool rollouts, many companies have taken more aggressive, “flash-cut” moves with top-down leadership and investment to jump to step 3 in the roadmap within months.
Flash-cut approaches
Given the pressure and opportunity of this crisis, as well as the increasing number of public proof points showing how large organizations can quickly transition to agile, you might be thinking about your ability to do accelerate your adoption and capture savings in 2009 from your efforts. From my experience, there are three things to heed while considering this:
Don’t waste a crisis
We don’t know how long or how deep this recession will be. Belt-tightening and staffing cuts almost seem inevitable. You can either reduce costs by just cutting your budget, or you can use this opportunity to make systemic changes in your business. I strongly urge you to make your cuts in parallel with investment in the long-term to avoid fixes that fail.
Provided you have a longer-term vision of your organization around agile software development, some outside coaching to help accelerate your adoption and solution for distributed management, you can take advantage of this crisis to make big changes very quickly. Enterprise IT agility is proven to do that — more so than investments in technology point solutions that only have a point in time savings. Most important, this approach will help ensure the savings from today’s cuts do not create worse problems in the long run.