Overview of Path to Agility (P2A)

Why Path to Agility?

The journey toward Agility can be long and challenging. Our experience and research has shown that the vast majority of organizations who take on an Agile transformation will either experience “superficial agility” which usually results in failure and reverting back to old, ineffective behaviors, or “pocket agility”, where some things may improve, but falls short of the true organizational improvements needed to be more resilient.

This is why we created the Path to Agility. It is a proven Agile transformation approach designed to help guide organizations through their Agile transformation journey. It helps organizations achieve specific business outcomes by providing a clear approach for identifying the capabilities needed for navigating change and the visibility needed to resolve obstacles and adapt along the path.   

Path to Agility is designed with the following objectives in mind: 

  • To provide visibility into transformation outcomes, progress, and impediments.
  • To enable the communication of the past, present, and future value within a context that everyone in the organization can understand. 
  • To provide change agents and leaders with proven patterns to improve transformation consistency, quality, and results.
  • To enable transfer of ownership to key decision-makers, practitioners, and stakeholders at all levels of the organization. 

Path to Agility Approach 

Stages

The Path to Agility approach consists of 5 stages: Align, Learn, Predict, Accelerate, and Adapt. 

Each stage provides a point of reference and context for change:

Align: It starts with a compelling purpose, the “why”, for taking on a transformation effort. It’s about addressing the conditions that are challenging the organization and setting a vision and prioritizing key business outcomes accordingly. Lack of alignment creates incoherence and waste that can derail a transformation. 

Learn:  The emphasis is on learning new concepts, terminologies, new ways of thinking and working, and creating a culture of learning.  

Predict: This stage is characterized by seeing real, tangible results and the indicators of what’s working in a given context or situation. It’s about getting the volatility out of the systems in order to be more consistent and predictable.  

Accelerate: This is about optimizing the full value stream. Tuning the engine that drives shorter cycle times for value delivery. 

Adapt: Here organizations have a whole organizational view of agility, based on lean and agile principles, making it more resilient to future market demands. 

With each stage of change, there are core capabilities that enable the continued progress toward the outcomes that the organization is striving for.  

Levels

The reality of organizational change is that it’s hard. It takes time and it will be met with resistance. It takes more than just a few people to create a movement that sticks. That’s why the Path to Agility develops the necessary capabilities to deliver outcomes across 3 levels:

Organization level - Leadership develops a modern mindset, increases visibility throughout the organization, and creates alignment around vision, goals and measured success for sustainable organizational change.

System level - Networks of teams are coordinating and collaborating to address dependencies and achieve optimal flow in value delivery.

Team level - Teams successfully take on new roles, establish agile team practices, increase engagement, and achieve sustainable, predictable cadence of delivering value. 

Each level defined in the approach has custom outcomes mapped within them that provide visibility into the relationships, dependencies and impacts across all stages of the journey.  

Outcomes

Path to Agility’s outcomes-based lens helps organizations evaluate where they are on the road to business agility and map out what they should focus on next--no matter where they are in their journey. 

Being outcome-focused, rather than practice-driven, means the Path to Agility approach is not intending to prescribe how to implement agile. The emphasis is on building agility, not “doing” Agile. The objective is to help the organization achieve what is needed in order to thrive. The approach has natural dependencies between outcomes and the outcomes build upon and strengthen each other.

Before an organization embarks on the road to agility, the leadership team uses the Path to Agility approach to identify and prioritize business outcomes that are best suited to their organization’s needs and goals.  The approach provides nine common business outcomes, based on many years of experience, that provide a starting point for alignment:

Components of Path To Agility

Organizations can customize Path to Agility to their preferred Business Outcomes, using the related set of Agile Outcomes and Agile Capabilities as a comprehensive roadmap to help visualize and build on the necessary Agile Practices that enable and drive tangible results. Every aspect in the Agile transformation journey can be clearly mapped to help align and measure progress.  

Business outcomes are the results needed by organizations to succeed in the modern world. Organizations use these to customize their Agile transformation strategy by prioritizing business outcomes to suit their needs.

Agile outcomes are the organizational functions that come as a result of developing an agile mindset and fundamental Agile capabilities within the organization. When Agile outcomes are achieved, they then become the building blocks for achieving sustainable business outcomes.

Agile capabilities are the foundational behaviors and abilities that, once in place, will lead to the development of Agile outcomes. These capabilities are tangible and measurable, but may vary across an organization.

Agile practices are the processes, techniques, roles, meetings, and systems that are recommended in popular Agile frameworks like Scrum, Kanban and Scaled Agile Framework. These practices are the tools and building blocks that allow organizations to build specific capabilities needed to achieve desired Agile and business outcomes.

Read More: