Much is written about self-organization in an Agile
world. For some, the notion of
self-organizing teams scares folks. Does
this mean that a team can decide everything?
Of course, the short answer is no.
I suggest the concern is due to not having boundaries for
self-organization. I call the framework
for this context, bounded authority.
Bounded authority is defined by the information, experience, and
decisions a group has control over within their context. Within a hierarchical
structure of a company, bounded authority can work at multiple levels. For simplicity, let us focus on the team
level, middle management level, and senior management level.
First, let’s spend a few minutes to explore what self
organization means. A
self organizing team is a group of motivated individuals who have a common
purpose, owns their work, and has the authority to make decisions on the work
they are doing. This means they can decide how to do the work (e.g., how to build the widget) and who will do the work (e.g., not assigned by a manager).
Within an Agile context, the goal is to push decision making to the level in which the most information and experience dwells. For a Scrum team, they self organize around the work in the product backlog that has been prioritized by the Product Owner. Once that work is available at the team level, the team has the authority to make architecture, design, programming, and coding decisions and can self-organize around the work.
Within an Agile context, the goal is to push decision making to the level in which the most information and experience dwells. For a Scrum team, they self organize around the work in the product backlog that has been prioritized by the Product Owner. Once that work is available at the team level, the team has the authority to make architecture, design, programming, and coding decisions and can self-organize around the work.
Above the middle management are the senior management (or
executives). Should they be reaching
down and telling the teams how to build the product? To answer this question, another question
should be answered. Does senior
management have more knowledge and experience in how something should be built or is
this knowledge most known at the team level?
While the answer is the latter (team level), senior management has a
bounded authority and duty to provide a strategy for the organization. This
means they must help the teams understand the strategy and help them align
strategy with their work.
Another example of bounded authority is relating it to
your requirements hierarchy. Consider
who has the authority over the strategy, who has the authority over the ideas,
who has the authority over the user stories.
This could be senior management who makes the decision to decide the top
strategies, the chief product owners who makes the decision on prioritizing the
ideas, the product owner who owns the decision to prioritize the backlog, and
the and team who makes the decision on how to self-organize around the user
stories.
The key to bounded authority is that each level knows what they can self-organize around, what they have the authority to change, and areas in which they can make decisions. Within an Agile context, that level of ownership and decision-making should be pushed down to the lowest possible level. This can be an exercise that occurs at both the senior management and middle management levels, and in all levels within an organization.
The key to bounded authority is that each level knows what they can self-organize around, what they have the authority to change, and areas in which they can make decisions. Within an Agile context, that level of ownership and decision-making should be pushed down to the lowest possible level. This can be an exercise that occurs at both the senior management and middle management levels, and in all levels within an organization.
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