How can I be agile without going Agile?

29 Oct 2018 04:41 PM

Blog posted by: John Edmonds, 29 October 2018.

Agile project managers in a meeting room around a table with Post-Its on the wall discussing their project

Agile – it’s such a simple word but one that can cause so much misunderstanding.

More and more of us are being asked to ‘be more agile’ in the way we work. We’re being called to be more adaptable, show greater agility, and to be more responsive. And it’s easy to see why, as most organizations are seeking to transform the way they operate in the face of a rapidly changing environment. Many sectors are having to respond to disruption, volatile markets, new technologies and uncertain futures.

But this call to be more agile has, in many cases, resulted in the inappropriate adoption of one or more Agile frameworks, and many teams, departments and individuals have been subject to practices and terminology that not only means little to them, but actually results in less efficient ways of working.

Yet, ‘to be more agile’ at both individual and enterprise levels, will help prepare for the journey of transformation and equip everyone to have a greater chance of success.

This is the rationale behind AgileSHIFT®, a new guidance from AXELOS. In the move towards enterprise agility there is not one single approach that fits all organizations and situations. For that reason, AgileSHIFT is based on five principles, universal characteristics that will always be applicable if you are seeking agility in the way you work.

These principles are the fundamental attitudes and behaviours, the guiding obligations for successful transformation. They are:

The AgileSHIFT principles are important because they create a reference point whenever something is in doubt and you need to make a decision on a specific course of action. They are essential guides for individual and organizational agility.

See our AgileSHIFT section for more information.