The questions is ‘Does the group include enough proven leaders to be able to drive the change process?’
—John Kotter
Train Executives, Managers, and Leaders
This is article three in the SAFe® Implementation Roadmap series. Click here to view the entire roadmap.
The previous Implementation Roadmap article, Train Lean-Agile Change Agents, described the three steps needed to create a guiding coalition:
- Train a number of Lean-Agile change agents as SAFe Program Consultants (SPCs)
- Train executives, managers, and other leaders
- Charter a Lean-Agile Center of Excellence (LACE)
It described how SPCs—acting as change agents—can ignite transformation within an enterprise. But they alone do not constitute a “sufficiently powerful guiding coalition” for change. For that, other stakeholders and senior executives must step in, step up, and lead the change.
After all, as Deming noted, “It is not enough that management commits themselves to quality and productivity, they must know what it is they must do.” This article describes the second part of the coalition—the need and mechanism to train executives, managers, and leaders.
Details
Strong leadership is needed to successfully implement any change in an organization. In the context of SAFe, some of these leaders will provide direct and ongoing sponsorship for the change by participating in the LACE; others will be directly involved in implementing SAFe or be leading, managing, and influencing the other players in the transformation. Their role could include participating directly in launching Agile Release Trains (ARTs). Or, it could mean that they will work at higher levels to eliminate impediments that arise in the company’s current governance, culture, and practices. All of these stakeholders need the knowledge and skills to lead—rather than to follow—the implementation.
Exhibit the Lean-Agile Mindset
To effectively implement SAFe and to provide the inspiration for relentless improvement, the enterprise’s leaders must embrace the Lean-Agile Mindset. This includes:
- Thinking Lean – Much of the thinking in Lean is represented in the SAFe House of Lean icon. It is organized around six key constructs. The roof represents the goal of delivering value. The pillars support that goal via respect for people and culture, flow, innovation, and relentless improvement. Lean leadership provides the foundation upon which everything else stands.
- Embracing agility – SAFe is built entirely on the skills, aptitude, and capabilities of Agile teams and their leaders. While there is no one definition of what an Agile method is, the Agile Manifesto provides a unified value system that helped introduce Agile practices into mainstream development.
Putting these concepts into practice has proven to be a powerful recipe, but when leaders support the Lean-Agile mindset only through words and not actions, their efforts are quickly recognized as a half-hearted attempt at change. When a leader’s actions don’t match their words, it can produce the exact opposite of the intended effect, and harden people against change. When that happens, the journey will end before it begins without leading to the personal or economic benefits of SAFe.
Apply Lean-Agile Principles
For an organization to successfully integrate SAFe, management must understand and reinforce its values. Leaders are expected to embrace and apply the ten principles that underlie SAFe, as highlighted in Figure 1 and in its accompanying SAFe article, SAFe Principles.
Figure 1. The SAFe Lean-Agile Principles
For more on the role of leadership in a SAFe transformation, read the Lean-Agile Leadership foundation article.
Learning New Skills
All of the above raises a question: how do leaders learn these new skills? The two-day class, Leading SAFe®: Leading the Lean-Agile Enterprise with the Scaled Agile Framework is designed for this purpose.
This course teaches leaders the SAFe Lean-Agile mindset, principles and practices, and the most effective leadership values for managing the new generation of knowledge workers. They will also learn how to:
- Thrive in the Digital Age with Business Agility
- Become a Lean-Agile Leader
- Establish Team and Technical Agility
- Build Solutions with Agile Product Delivery
- Explore Lean Portfolio Management
- Lead the Change
It’s important to understand that this class is just the beginning of the journey. As Bill Gates reminds us, “The moment you stop learning is also the one in which you will stop leading.” Wise advice for anyone wanting the full benefits that are achievable through SAFe. To this end, the class provides a recommended reading list and many other activities and exercises to help emerging Lean-Agile leaders master these new skills. Leaders are also responsible for building a Continuous Learning Culture as an organizational competency, starting with a commitment to their own learning journey.
To test their knowledge, attendees have the opportunity to take an exam and, upon passing, become Certified SAFe® Agilists (SAs). This gives them access to the SAFe community platform, which hosts various assets, such as training videos and a dedicated forum for sharing knowledge.
Moving Forward
By making the first three ‘critical moves’ in the SAFe Implementation Roadmap—Reaching the Tipping Point, Training Lean-Agile Change Agents, and Training Executives, Managers, and Leaders—the enterprise is well on the path toward success. There is, however, one more step needed to complete that powerful guiding coalition: charter and operate a LACE. That is the topic of the next article in this series.
NextLearn More
[1] Knaster, Richard, and Dean Leffingwell. SAFe 5.0 Distilled, Achieving Business Agility with the Scaled Agile Framework. Addison-Wesley, 2020.Additional Resources
To learn more about Leading SAFe, and to find a class near you, click here.
Last update: 10 February 2021