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If We Are Doing Agile at Scale We Must Adopt SAFe (Anti-pattern)

Or “The answer is SAFe; now what was the question?” Or “We Need to Go SAFe Now!”

Consumer

Description

At a certain point in the transformation, executives realizes that there seems to be value in the “agile thing”. They have noticed that other executives seems to be gaining credibility because they are moving toward agile, and are reporting benefits. In addition to a genuine desire to improve, the executive will feel pressure to be seen to be doing something as well. A quick review of other implementations will show that other people are using SAFe. There is a nice website, with a lot of information that speaks the language of the executive (strategic themes, portfolio planning, etc), that seems to be well thought out, and shows a nice hierarchical set up where clearly senior people are identified away from more junior people. It also seems pretty safe to do. Not only are my peers using it, but there are all these case studies and it’s right there in the name. What could possibly go wrong?

Larger groups in particular gravitate to this model because it seems comfortable, controllable, and predictable. It certainly seems to make this whole agile thing (“which from what I’ve heard is pretty soft”) more concrete. It seems to be oriented to large organizations. In order to make progress, the executive starts driving toward this implementation, working to create a plan which, at the end will have all these structures and approaches in place - a project plan. You just build team, identify people into roles in the new hierarchy, do training, and ta-da! we are transformed and we can move on to the next initiative.

You’ll hear, “it makes me wonder why the agile coaches didn’t just say ‘do SAFe’ in the first place.”

And while this thinking is generic to other scaling frameworks, it is particularly pronounced with SAFe.

Impact

Let’s be clear, there is nothing wrong with SAFe. SAFe captures good values, principles, and practices, that are the gathered up the results of a number real world experiences. And I've used the framework in many situations.

The problem is that like all frameworks, it is a tool, and sometimes tools are used in the wrong context, and even if the context is applicable, the tools can be misapplied which do not produce the expected result or worse result in outcomes that you’ll regret in the future.

Let’s get specific for a moment and think through some of these potential problems and impacts:

To repeat, there is nothing wrong with SAFe, except if you apply it in the wrong context or misapply some of the ideas.

(Potential) Remedies

Do not just assume you should put all this structure in place Day 1. There are a number of potential remedies:

No matter what approach is taken, there is significant organizational fortitude required to do this as agile represents a fundamentally different way of thinking about work which often causes friction with the existing organization. For example, teams are stood up as stable, long lasting structures which mean that you don’t bring people to work (eg a project) but rather bring work to a team that has the capability to work. For this reason leadership has to “lean in” and work with the team through the process - this is not something you can just say “make it so”.

Examples

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