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8 Elements of Successful Distributed Agile Teams

8 Elements of Successful Distributed Agile Teams

The common advice for a distributed agile team is, “Don’t do that!” And, we know that at least half of all agile teams are distributed. The common advice isn’t working or useful.

However, many distributed teams have problems using agile approaches. Too often, they don't understand how to adapt to this very different environment. In this talk, Mark Kilby will walk you through eight elements of successful distributed agile teams, and how you might take small steps and giant leaps to increase your team’s success.

Mark Kilby

October 15, 2018
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  1. My distributed (agile) background … 2001 2003 2008 2012 2013

    2014 for hire consulting across industries volunteer
  2. 79%

  3. Measuring up to agile Satisfy the Customer Welcome Change Deliver

    Frequently Collaborate Daily Support & Trust Motivated Teams Promote 
 Face-to-Face Conversations Measured by Working Software Promote Sustainable Pace Promote Technical Excellence Maximize Through Simplicity Have 
 Self-Organized
 Teams Reflect & Adjust 
 Regularly Adapted from http://agilemanifesto.org ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ? ?
  4. Patterns more info at http://remotelyagile.info / @mkilby Satellite 
 one

    or a few remote from team Nebula whole team dispersed Clusters team in a few locations
  5. ELEMENT: Establish Acceptable Hours of Overlap © 2018 Mark Kilby

    and Johanna Rothman We get tangled up on time zones but
 is that really the problem?
  6. Distributed 
 Collaboration 
 Limits? © 2018 Mark Kilby and

    Johanna Rothman Based on work preference (not time zones)
  7. How Many Acceptable Hours of Overlap? © 2018 Mark Kilby

    and Johanna Rothman Can the team choose their core hours? Can the team choose when to meet?
  8. ELEMENT: 
 Transparency at All Levels Keep team spaces as

    open as possible public appreciations ask questions in public © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman
  9. What level of transparency can your organization support? © 2018

    Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman How easy is it to share information within the team? Across teams? Across the organization?
 What info is really “sensitive” or “need to know”?
  10. ELEMENT: Culture of Continuous Improvement Change leaders should model improvement

    first Then focus on the team Works with rhythm Key idea: EXPERIMENT! © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman
  11. ELEMENT: Culture of Continuous Improvement © 2018 Mark Kilby and

    Johanna Rothman Examples: Personal - Improvement Days /Mentoring Team - Retrospectives/ 
 Training Org - Lean Coffee /
 Meetups (in person) / 
 Improvement Days
  12. (Can the org) Create a Culture of Continuous Improvement? ©

    2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman Are individuals free to experiment? Are teams free to experiment? Are programs free to experiment? Does senior leadership participate in experiments?
  13. ELEMENT: 
 Pervasive Communication © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna

    Rothman Announcement in meeting Q&A in chat 
 backchannel Reminders in
 email Details in wiki “To move, to breathe, to fly, to float,
 To gain all while you give,
 To roam the roads of lands remote,
 To travel is to live.” ― Hans Christian Andersen Critical idea or message
 
 (Annual vision? Pivots? 
 Market shifts? Acquisitions?)
  14. (Can your org) practice 
 Pervasive Communication? © 2018 Mark

    Kilby and Johanna Rothman Do you share key info in multiple channels to 
 accommodate different learning styles?
 Do you repeat until you hear the message repeated by others? 
 (perhaps in live or online Q&A, backchannels, start of meetings?)
  15. Shifts in how to 
 coordinate & communicate Back Channel

    - always have all hailing frequencies open (chat); someone should always monitor Buddy System - each remote person has a “buddy” in the room to make sure they are connected to the team (paired communication) Co-Pilot – someone at another location that can help you coordinate the whole team (paired facilitation) more info at http://remotelyagile.info / @mkilby © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman Satellite Clusters Nebula Satellite Clusters Clusters
  16. Learning natural tendencies within a team Ease of Adoption Time

    to Introduce easy more 
 difficult 1-2 hours week weeks or months DISC MBTI Strength Finder 2.0 Compass activity 
 (DIY) © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman
  17. Learning natural tendencies within a team Ease of Adoption Time

    to Introduce easy more 
 difficult 1-2 hours week weeks or months DISC MBTI Strength Finder 2.0 Compass activity 
 (DIY) Liftoffs (diy) Other benefits - shared vision, 
 working agreements? © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman
  18. (Can the team) 
 Assume Good Intent? Do team members

    check-in with each other 
 when there are misunderstandings? Do team members support psychological safety in 
 asynchronous and synchronous communications? © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman
  19. ELEMENT: Project Rhythm Whether time-boxed (e.g., Scrum, XP) or in

    Flow (Kanban), all teams have a rhythm Encourage team to decide rhythm as they form Encourage the team to change rhythm when they are not “keeping a beat”. (e.g. retrospect) © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman
  20. (Can the team) Create a Project Rhythm? © 2018 Mark

    Kilby and Johanna Rothman Do you (en)force the same rhythm across all your teams 
 or 
 allow teams to determine their own rhythm based on 
 their work and context?
  21. ELEMENT: Resilience Can we… quickly adjust to meet a goal?

    adjust to hardship? provide an “adaptive environment”? © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman
  22. Checking Resilience Example - Communication Can anyone on the team

    start a new communication channel at any time? Will anyone on the team initiate communications?
 
 Is there psychological safety? Example - Facilitation Can anyone on the team facilitate any meeting? 
 (backlog refinement, planning, standup, review, retrospective) © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman
  23. (Can the team) Create Resilience with Holistic Culture? © 2018

    Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman Does the team have an understanding of each team member’s strengths, context, and goals?
 
 Do teams have control over their schedule and their workspace?
  24. Deep Focus can be important, but … Collaboration can help

    you explore problems and solutions faster ELEMENT: 
 Default to Collaboration © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman
  25. (Can the team) Default to Collaboration? © 2018 Mark Kilby

    and Johanna Rothman Do team members seek collaboration or quiet time 
 when working remotely? Do team members find benefit to pairing or mobbing remotely?
  26. How to reach O? Principle Small Step 
 Practices Giant

    Leap 
 Practices Acceptable Hours of Overlap Select team members in nearby time zones Allow team to choose core hours and meeting times Transparency at All Levels Public appreciations;
 Encourages questions in public Open team channels to organization Culture of Continuous Improvement Retrospectives; lean coffee Q&A (across org) Mentoring; Improvement Days or Hackathons; Meetups Pervasive Communication Backchannel, Buddy System, Copilots Multi-channel communications (some automated) Assume Good Intent Learn team member tendencies (e.g. Compass activity) Continual coaching on listening skills, default to high bandwidth communications in conflict Project Rhythms Time-boxed synchronous activities if >6 hours overlap; varied cadence for flow-based Allow team to set and adjust all cadences via retrospective Resilience Through Holistic Culture Establish psychological safety; model “asking for help”; share some personal context Set rituals (1-1s, retro) where team members share interests and goals Default to Collaboration Encourage daily check-ins beyond a stand-up Support pairing and mobbing activities
  27. Thanks! Questions? more info at
 http://markkilby.com Twitter: @mkilby http://www.linkedin.com/in/mkilby Watch

    for updates to my book on building distributed agile teams at https://leanpub.com/ geographicallydistributedagileteams and via my website markkilby.com
  28. References 
 (in order of mention) - http://agilemanifesto.org - DISC

    vs MBTI assessments. https://coachfederation.org/blog/index.php/8211/ - Strengthfinder 2.0 - https://www.gallupstrengthscenter.com/ - Compass exercise adapted for online teams from “A Simple Exercise to Strengthen Emotional Intelligence in Teams” KQED Mindshift https:// ww2.kqed.org/mindshift/2015/06/22/a-simple-exercise-to-strengthen-emotional- intelligence-in-teams/ - Play Prelude for forming virtual teams http://www.playprelude.com/ - Liftoff: Start and Sustain Successful Agile Teams, 2nd ed. https://pragprog.com/ book/liftoff/liftoff-second-edition - All remaining material (c) 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman - for more information see http://markkilby.com and https://www.jrothman.com/
  29. Photo credits (in order of appearance) - starry sky (title

    slide). Mitchell Hollander on unsplash.com - http://agilemanifesto.org - https://pxhere.com/en/photo/287010 - 1961 photo of Yuri Gagarin in space. CC Public Domain - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/ File:ISS-47_Tim_Kopra_on_a_Laptop_in_the_Zvezda_Service_Mod ule.jpg - Public Domain - https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/styles/full_width_feature/ public/iss036e006695.jpg - Public Domain - Satellite.https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Navstar-2F.jpg - Public Domain. - Crab Nebula.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebula#/media/ File:Crab_Nebula.jpg - Public Domain. - The Pleiades, an open star cluster. Public Domain. https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_astronomical_objects#/media/ File:Pleiades_large.jpg - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hohmann_transfer_orbit.png - under the Creative Commons license. - Space station concept - https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/ files/arc-15570-1_160554main_jsc2006e43519_high.jpg - Public Domain - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/ File:World_Time_Zones_Map.png, Public Domain - NASA astronaut Randy Bresnik prepares to enter The Boeing Company's CST-100 spacecraft. https://www.nasa.gov/ content/boarding-cst-100 Public domain. - Astronaut Serena Auñón-Chancellor examines her eye with a Fundoscope aboard ISS. https://www.nasa.gov/image- feature/astronaut-serena-au-n-chancellor-examines-her-eye- with-a-fundoscope Public domain. - Space Shuttle Discovery Landing. https://www.nasa.gov/ images/content/587251main_2011-2082.jpg Public domain - https://dribbble.com/shots/3167286-Users-Icon-Free-PSD - Globe Photo by Juliana Kozoski on Unsplash
  30. Photo credits, Extras (in order of appearance) - Uhura /

    Star Trek https://www.flickr.com/photos/x-ray_delta_one/ 12263923206 (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0) - Buddy System for -6 PLSS, Apollo 14 press kit. https://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/ a14/a14pk_buddy_system_en.jpg - Public Domain. - Gemini astronauts. https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/images/ 258507main_s66-44601_full.jpg - Public Domain. - https://pixabay.com/en/puzzle-team-businessmen-cooperation-2651912/ CC0 - PlayPrelude.com logo. Used with permission. - overhead view of orbital positions of the planets in systems with multiple transiting planets discovered by NASA's Kepler mission. https:// www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/kepler/multimedia/images/kepler-multi- systems_jan_2012.html Public domain. - Neutral Buoyancy Simulator, Solar Max Testing 1983. NASA. https://flic.kr/p/ Ge2uen Public domain. - NASA Apollo 11 moon landing. https://www.nasa.gov/centers/marshall/ moonmars/apollo40/apollo11_aldrin.html Public domain - SpaceX CRS-8 first stage landing - https://www.flickr.com/photos/spacex/ 25788014884/ - Public Domain. - SpaceX JCSAT-14 Launch - https://www.flickr.com/photos/spacex/ 26751237322/ - Public Domain. Other images © 2018 Mark Kilby and Johanna Rothman