Foreword xi
Preface xv
Introduction xvii
Acknowledgments xxv
About the Authors xxvii
Chapter 1: An Organization at a Crossroads 1
Complex Challenges Create Urgency for Agility 2
Reducing Dependencies Makes Change Possible 4
Organizational Change Requires Protective, Progressive Dictatorship
10
Two Paths, One Goal 12
Reflections on the Journey 15
Chapter 2: Forming Teams and Discovering Purpose 17
Changing the Organization, One Team at a Time 18
Finding the Right People 22
Empowering Teams 26
Placing the Customer at the Center of the Change 29
Reflections on the Journey 35
Chapter 3: Shifting from Output to Impact 37
"What Gets Measured Gets Done" 38
Reflections on the Journey 53
Chapter 4: Learning to Let Go 55
Empowerment Doesn't Come for Free 56
Agile Leaders Help Teams to Grow Their Ability to Reach Audacious
Goals 60
Letting Go in Small Steps 65
Slow Decision-Making Kills Team Self-Management 69
Reflections on the Journey 73
Chapter 5: The Predictable Existential Crisis 75
New Ways of Working Threaten the Old System 76
Reflections on the Journey 97
Chapter 6: Leaders, Everywhere 99
Nurturing and Growing an Agile Organization 100
Reward Building Teams and Leadership, Not Silos 114
Promotional Rewards Lock in Organizational Structures 117
Performance Reviews Don't Go Away, but They Do Change Dramatically
118
Reflections on the Journey 122
Chapter 7: Aligning the Organization 123
Evolving the Operating Model 124
Scale Agility by Removing Dependencies 131
Consolidating Support and Eliminating Opposition 132
Realign Compensation Plans 140
Realign Career Paths 141
Embrace Catalytic Leadership 142
Replace Status Meetings with Transparency 143
Be Realistic About How Long the Transition Will Take, and What It
Means 146
Reflections on the Journey 147
Chapter 8: Aligning the Culture 149
What Makes Changing Culture Hard 150
Agile Leaders Must First Find Their Own Way 152
Build Bridges to the New Culture 153
Anticipate and Overcome Setbacks 159
Use "Self-Sustenance" as a Measure of Success 162
Agile Journeys Never Really End 165
Reflections on the Journey 168
Appendix A: Patterns and Anti-Patterns for Effective Leadership
169
Appendix B: Doreen's Sketchnotes 171
Index
Ron Eringa is a Leadership Developer. His mission is to
create organizations where people love to work and where real
customer value is created. In the last 20 years he has built
expertise on how to lead IT organizations that use Agile and Scrum.
After an initial education in electrical engineering and software
engineering he ended up in different leadership roles. In these
roles he discovered the leadership capabilities that are essential
to create autonomous teams with a high level of maturity and
creativity. He believes that autonomous teams are the fundament of
a modern organization that thrives in this complex and
ever-changing world.
Kurt Bittner has been delivering working products in short,
feedback-driven cycles for nearly 40 years, and has helped many
organizations do the same. He is particularly interested in helping
people form strong, self-organizing, high-performance teams that
deliver solutions that customers love, and helping organizations
use empirical feedback to achieve customer outcome-focused goals.
He is an author or editor of many books on agile product
development, including Mastering Professional Scrum, The Zombie
Scrum Survival Guide, The Nexus Framework for Scaling Scrum, The
Professional Scrum Team, and Professional Agile Leadership, as well
as The Guide to Evidence-Based Management, and The Nexus Guide. He
lives in Boulder, Colorado.
Laurens Bonnema is an Agile Trainer and Management
Consultant and a mentor to leaders creating resilient organizations
at any scale. He has a strong background in IT with experience in
almost every role. As a Professional Scrum Master, Certified Scrum
Master, Certified Scrum Product Owner, Certified Agile Master,
Agile Master Assessor, IPMA Agile Assessor, and PRINCE2
Practitioner, Laurens strives to merge classic and agile management
in the conviction that it is the future of professional management.
As a Professional Scrum Trainer and SAFe Program Consultant, he
helps to improve the profession of software delivery as well as
marketing, human resources, and finance. Laurens brings his
experience in enterprise IT since 1999 and on Scrum Teams since
2006 to his teaching, is a driving force in the agile community,
and a sought-after speaker at conferences and events.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |