As I look across the Agile landscape, I am worried that Agile has become little more than a superficial tag that some teams and companies seek without really aligning with the cultural shift that is needed to truly become Agile. What I mean by this is to really align with Agile, it means to understand and embrace the Agile Values and Principles. While this sounds obvious, I believe there is such little focus on the values and principles and much more so on the mechanics.
I have hypothesized that those involved in Agile are more knowledgeable about the mechanics of “doing Agile” than understanding the cultural aspects needed for “being Agile”. My specify hypothesis stated that I believe fewer people could name 3 of the 12.
I have hypothesized that those involved in Agile are more knowledgeable about the mechanics of “doing Agile” than understanding the cultural aspects needed for “being Agile”. My specify hypothesis stated that I believe fewer people could name 3 of the 12.
As I look across the Agile landscape, I am worried that Agile has become little more than a superficial tag that some teams and organizations seek without aligning with the real cultural shift that is needed to truly become Agile. What I mean by this is to really align with Agile, it means to understand and embrace the Agile Values and Principles. While this sounds obvious, I believe there is such little focus on the values and principles and much more so on the mechanics.
I have hypothesized that those involved in Agile are
more knowledgeable about the mechanics of “doing Agile” than understanding the cultural aspects needed for “being Agile”. My specify hypothesis stated that I believe fewer people
could name 3 of the 12 Agile Principles, then could roughly name 3 of the 5 Scrum events (i.e., Sprint, Sprint Planning, Daily Scrum,
Sprint Review, and Sprint Retrospective).
In order to make my hypothesis meaningful, it was important to test it.
With that in mind, I established an experiment that
tests if people can articulate the Agile principles and if they can articulate
the Scrum events. I created a simple
survey that asked Agile participants to write down as many of the five Scrum
events that they knew and then write down as many of the twelve Agile
Principles they knew. I distributed this
survey to two different Agile professional events and accumulated over 100
survey responses (109 to be exact). The
results were quite revealing and support my hypothesis. Of the 109 Agile participants:
- 59% knew 3 or more of the five Scrum events
- 11% knew 3 or more of the twelve Agile principles
In reviewing the survey
results, about half of the 67% confused the Agile principles with the Agile Values (e.g., Individuals and interactions over processes and
tools). On the flip side, 59% could name
at least 3 of the mechanical Scrum events.
Here are two charts that illustrate the number of respondents that could
name a certain number of Scrum events and Agile principles.
Based on this data, my concluding hypothesis is
that the reason there is such a lack of awareness of Agile principles is that
there is very little education focused on the Agile principles. This is particularly concerning since the
principles form the basis for what an Agile culture should look like. A simple way for each and every one of us to
test this hypothesis is to ask these two questions:
- How many Agile principles can you name? Is it 3 or more?
- How much Agile related education have you have received and how much of it was focused on the Agile principles?