So agree, way too many people think scrum and agile are the same thing. https://t.co/wKg6ugfbeM
— Kevin Goldsmith (@KevinGoldsmith) July 9, 2018
Author: kevin
Building a Culture of Continuous Improvement
A culture of continuous improvement is a culture where you are always open to improving how you build and deliver. You don’t accept the status quo; you choose how to work and feel empowered to change it if it no longer makes sense. It is a people-first culture.
Having had the benefit of a culture like this at the last place I worked, when I started at my current company, I wanted to see if I could create a continuous improvement culture there, too. It took some effort, and we learned some painful lessons along the way, but we did make significant improvements to how our teams operated and how the engineering organization functioned.
As a result of these changes, our teams are able to execute at a much higher level, and the morale of the organization improved significantly. In short, we get a lot more stuff done, and we are happier doing it.
To get there, we had to change some of our frameworks, structures, and processes, or adopt new ones.
Here are some of the frameworks we created that could be helpful for any company:
- WIGs and sWIGs: A way to align the company around a common mid-term strategy and shorter-term tactical deliveries in a way that preserves team autonomy and agile delivery. WIG stands for “wildly important goal,†and sWIG means “sub-wildly important goal.†Our WIGs clarify the midterm strategy for the company, and the sWIGs clarify the shorter-term tactics we are using to achieve that strategy
- DUHBs: A data-driven decision-making framework that allows individuals in the company to craft a clear, data-based argument for a making a change. DUHB stands for data, understanding, hypotheses, and bets, which describes the linear process of solving a problem
- Journey teams: An autonomous team model that gives teams more direct control over how they work, aligned with customer journeys
- RFCs: A mechanism that allows anyone in the organization to drive large-scale change inclusively. It is a document and a process that uses the “request for comment†structure from standards groups as a basis
- Retrospectives everywhere: A cultural shift in how we think about examining our organizational strengths and weaknesses when it comes to executing projects
Each framework builds upon the others. By making the priorities and goals of the company clear, people have the context to make good decisions. With a common data-driven process for vetting ideas, people have a good, structured way to propose changes. With autonomous teams, we can test new ideas locally and let the best practices emerge organically. With an inclusive mechanism for proposing larger-scale changes, the organization can participate in the process instead of having it pushed down from leadership. Finally, with a practice of retrospectives at all levels, the organization can learn from successes and mistakes made in any of the other components.
These frameworks created an environment that was not only adaptable and nimble, but also one where the members of the organization were empowered to make changes and were given tools to make advocating for change easier.
If there are more companies with continuous improvement cultures, it means a healthier and happier industry for all of us.
[This is a repost of https://www.techwell.com/techwell-insights/2018/05/building-culture-continuous-improvement]
new tweet: July 05, 2018 at 09:56PM
Since upgrading to High Sierra, my MBP fan has been running about 1000% more frequently. Even when nothing is running.
— Kevin 🇸🇪 Goldsmith (@KevinGoldsmith) July 6, 2018
new tweet: July 03, 2018 at 05:24PM
Our interns at @AstrumU created this survey to help with their research. Please share with your college student or recent college graduate friends! https://t.co/wqXjiLetb7
— Kevin 🇸🇪 Goldsmith (@KevinGoldsmith) July 4, 2018
new tweet: July 03, 2018 at 05:08PM
The solution for every inexplicable error message in Azure seems to be "give everyone ownership rights to everything and then it works ok"
— Kevin 🇸🇪 Goldsmith (@KevinGoldsmith) July 4, 2018
new tweet: June 30, 2018 at 06:01PM
Posted on Instagram:Barbican Centre https://t.co/znkqbJGB6s pic.twitter.com/ByjhoOsafc
— Kevin 'CaoimhÃn' Goldsmith (@KevinGoldsmith) July 1, 2018
new tweet: June 30, 2018 at 01:02AM
Once again, outdated power connector or Borg network port? pic.twitter.com/NoAqryORC8
— Kevin 'CaoimhÃn' Goldsmith (@KevinGoldsmith) June 30, 2018
new tweet: June 28, 2018 at 09:56AM
thank you to @whiteoctevents and @Geek_Manager. â¤ï¸â¤ï¸â¤ï¸
Once again another amazing #LeadDevLondon. I so appreciate being part of this amazing conference!
I've posted my slides here for anyone who is interested: https://t.co/oeiEj7Cs5M
— Kevin 'CaoimhÃn' Goldsmith (@KevinGoldsmith) June 28, 2018
new tweet: June 28, 2018 at 07:45AM
Really digging this framework for helping people figure out their goals from @mseckington. will definitely incorporate some of these ideas. https://t.co/AgibPiZ1KQ
— Kevin 'CaoimhÃn' Goldsmith (@KevinGoldsmith) June 28, 2018
new tweet: June 28, 2018 at 07:19AM
Ready to go! pic.twitter.com/5KOazluqzU
— Kevin 'CaoimhÃn' Goldsmith (@KevinGoldsmith) June 28, 2018