»
S
I
D
E
B
A
R
«
What changes for a manager in a team moving into agile?
April 26th, 2008 by Joca

In a traditional environment, a technical team manager is responsible for prioritization, task distribution and progress control, among other non-technical responsibilities such as people management, new employees training and team representation to the rest of the organization.

As soon as a team becomes agile:

  • prioritization is now in the hands of the PO (Product Owner), who manages the product backlog;
  • task distribution is now in the hands of the entire team, and the distribution is done daily, during the planning meeting and the daily stand-up meetings;
  • progress control is now in the hands of the Scrum Master.

So, what’s left for the manager?

Besides the non-technical responsibilities mentioned above (people management, new employees training and team representation to the rest of the organization), there’s now room for other responsibilities:

  1. help the Scrum Master remove the barriers to a successful sprint and overall agile adoption;
  2. help the Scrum Master coach and mentor the team members on the new process;
  3. revise the product backlog with the PO in order to bring a technical view of the stories.
  4. technical research, looking for new technologies and tendencies that could help the team;
  5. increase the focus on the technical strategic planning.

There are cases where the manager assumes the role of Scrum Master, so she embraces 1. and 2. In other cases the manager assumes the role of PO, due to her strong business acumen, so she embraces 3.

It is not unusual to find a manager who decides to leave the organization, due to the fact that she is unable to find her place in the new agile organization.

However, as we could see, there are many responsibilities and new chalenges left to the manager. The key is to figure out where the manager fits better both in her perspective and in the organization’s perspective.

Be the first to like.

4 Responses  
Joca on stuff » Blog Archive » O papel da gerência em times ágeis writes:
April 7th, 2009 at 11:40 PM

[...] quase um ano atrás eu havia comentado sobre a mudança do papel do gerente em um time que resolveu adotar metodologias ágeis. Na London QCon 2009 foi apresentada a palestra Managers in Scrum de Roman Pichler, um consultor [...]

Joca on stuff (about internet, product management, agile, swimming and etc.) » Blog Archive » Necessidade de impor a colaboração writes:
May 6th, 2009 at 7:09 PM

[...] Quando da implementação de metodologia ágil, pode acontecer de uma ou mais pessoas do time se sentirem ameaçadas pelos efeitos da colaboração em função dos aspectos acima e, numa situação como essa, acabarem optando por procurar outro emprego. Esse é um risco conhecido. Ken Schwaber, um dos criadores do Scrum, menciona que é esperado até 20% de turn over quando da implementação de metodologias ágeis. Ele também menciona que até 40% da gerência pode ir embora. Já comentei sobre o tema da mudança de papel do gerente nas metodologias ágeis. [...]

Tecnologia de Internet (Locaweb) » Blog Archive » O papel da gerência em times ágeis writes:
May 6th, 2010 at 12:59 PM

[...] quase um ano atrás eu comentei sobre a mudança do papel do gerente em um time que resolveu adotar metodologias ágeis. Na London QCon 2009 foi apresentada a palestra Managers in Scrum de Roman Pichler, um consultor [...]

Agile management | Joca on stuff writes:
March 4th, 2011 at 12:18 PM

[...] What changes for a manager in a team moving into agile? [...]

Leave a Reply

»  Substance: WordPress   »  Style: Ahren Ahimsa