BOOK A CALL

June 18, 2014

Developing Skills the Agile Way

By Russ Lewis. Published online June 18, 2014

Development Occurs over Time, not on a Training Course

During our many combined years as trainers with Learning Tree International, the average instructor grade exceeded 3.8 of a possible 4.0. Attendees loved the training, and provided fantastic testimonials. But that doesn't mean they used what we taught them, or that they improved because of the information.

Developing skills is a process, not something that happens in a single meeting or a week-long course. Imagine teaching a group of middle-aged office workers how to exercise using a running machine. You tell them which settings to use and how long to use it for. You cover the safety points. You even help them through their first session, checking that they are OK every few minutes. They are all delighted with the training, with how easy everything was, and promise to try and keep it up. Next year you meet the same group to teach them about the rowing machine and ask how they had been doing with their exercise.

You'd consider it a success if just one person was running regularly because of it, right? Because we all know that it was easy when the instructor was there for support and encouragement, more fun when it is a team thing, convenient because it happened during work time, and everything on a course just works like magic. But it's really hard to do it on your own. It takes something extraordinary - motivation.

Marshall Goldsmith noted this in his research into the effects on employees of meaningful contact with leaders, peers and coaches.

Motivation is Changing

If you want to increase productivity and boost developing skills the key is to create the right motivation model. For most knowledge workers (people who use a computer and think for a living) the model is set in a "learning to learn" environment. Dan M Pink hit the spot in his must-read book
Drive: The Surprising Truth about what Motivates Us which agrees with Agile, that the old "command and control" model is broken.

People want to work in an environment where their development matters at least as much as their development of the organisation. Solving problems with peers, following-up with leaders and managers, continuously improving process are all ways in which a learning environment is sustained. According to Pink, people respond positively to clear objectives, mastery of their task and autonomy.

You'll hear no disagreements from The Agiliser, a "lifelong learner" developing skills all the time. They sit very comfortably with the Agile principles of:

  • Deliver working software frequently.
  • Build projects around motivated individuals. Give them the environment and support they need, and trust them to get the job done.
  • The best architectures, requirements, and designs emerge from self-organizing teams.

A little training can go a very long way. In a Day Training anyone?

Newsletter signup

    Recent Posts

    How to restore Teams Wiki data after Jan 2024

    Microsoft killed Wiki on Teams - who knew they would delete our data too - here's how to restore it

    Read More
    Transformation research update

    'Managing Tensions not People' as transformation method research update at the end of 2023 This time last year I was searching through the ambidexterity literature for tensions other than the usual explore-exploit. I built a website to publish my progress online, which I think was a diversion! Literature research update I found more than 70 […]

    Read More
    The HOW of Transformation

    The HOW of Transformation recorded at the Global Digital Transformation Summit in Berlin 2023 Summary Managers who manage tensions enjoy greater performance, especially in complex and dynamic environments. In this 36-minute talk: I tell the story of Transport for London's transformation from a one-sided fares Operator to an integrated Developer-Operator. And show how technologists using […]

    Read More
    In praise of rights licensing bots

    I was at the digital transformation summit in Berlin last week when I got a scary "unlicensed use" email from a rights licensing lawyer. The rights licensing bot service sent me a screenshot of the page and the cartoon I was alleged to have used. I say alleged because I didn't recognise the cartoon or […]

    Read More
    Ways of Working: 5 improvements for leaders

    Most ways of working still rely on functional hierarchy, where managers make decisions and workers do the work. Managers know they can't change this work structure, but they can transform its effectiveness without asking for permission and without needing a budget. Before exploring the changes that transform the way people work, we need to recognise […]

    Read More
    Manage tensions if you want an agile transformation

    Today’s challenge is that traditional management approaches, where managers tell people what to do and how to do it, are not as effective as they once were. Agile transformation takes years, but changing management’s focus from people to tensions could be a better solution. It is simpler, faster, and considerably more cost-effective. Management is the […]

    Read More
    December 3, 2023
    In praise of rights licensing bots

    I was at the digital transformation summit in Berlin last week when I got a scary "unlicensed use" email from a rights licensing lawyer. The rights licensing bot service sent me a screenshot of the page and the cartoon I was alleged to have used. I say alleged because I didn't recognise the cartoon or […]

    Read More
    March 26, 2023
    12 signs that using 'ambidexterity as an agile transformation model' is not my original idea

    You see, I thought I was the first agilist to make the connection between agile transformation models and organizational ambidexterity. Certainly, it seemed original when it emerged in conversation with my supervisor. In fact, it was Dr Alireza Javanmardi Kashan’s idea (better make it 13 signs), but it came from our conversation so we said […]

    Read More
    July 3, 2020
    New Normal: FGS Panel Discussion

    I joined FGS CEO, Peter Stroud and his guests discussing “the new normal”; James Hall, Global Storage Chief Technologist at HPE Frank Purcell, Operational Services Manager at Islington Council What you cant see is the wine-tasting that followed. Pete sent each of us a case of half-bottles of wine from Berry Bros. It was great.

    Read More
    1 2 3 13
    linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram