Business Value of Achieving Organizational Agility

Business Value must be qualified and quantifiable: What is valuable to the business? It certainly isn't the technology only that keeps business running, unless that technology (including agile/scrum processes, tools, HW/SW, and IT competence) can support the goals of the business. "Quality Attributes" (QAs) help the business identify and prioritize business value. Discussions with the organization's users and management will identify what is important to the organization and should focus on: Reliability, Usability, Scalability, Extensibility, Modifiability, Sell-ability (Profitability), Marketability, Secure-ability, Performability, etc.etc. All must all be identified and PRIORITIZED. The next step is for the business values to be identified by the organization, be quantified by management and worked into the architecture of the system. For instance, how important is time-to-market? How much per week do you lose as a company, if you take a more maintainable (and time consuming) approach to designing and coding the software, versus getting something out into the market quickly? Every organization fluctuates between prioritizing business values based on revenue/cost versus risk.
Business value is an informal term and could mean different to different people. According to the 80:20 principle, 20% of the task log will carry 80% of the value. In instances where most of the tasks share the same priority, the business value plays a bigger role in determining which task needs to be addressed first. While opportunity value propositions are often expressed in dollar convertible terms, other dimensions of strategic intent may improve positioning and strategic intent and produce useful measured outcomes related to a business competitiveness, management predictability, process improvement, engineering trustworthiness, and operations dependability. Only time can tell how much business value a product will deliver. However, isolated feature values ultimately do not matter. The business has to decide which features it believes will deliver value relative to other features in order to drive development. It really does not matter how accurate that decision is, because the decision needs to be made in order to deliver and then find out if the resulting package delivers sufficient value or not.
Prioritization is key. Business Value works in conjunction with Priority - so if you have some capacity in an iteration, and are looking to pull from the backlog, you can grab that high value, lower priority item that delivers a lot for hopefully a small amount of effort. Sometimes it’s great to have a strategy to define business value, when you have competing priorities, but truly the backlog should be full of generally agreed upon top priorities for the end users. In the end "successful" metrics are a result building a customer or consumer focused product. Now when you start shift from doing Agile to being agile, you must be aware of the business values identified to be incorporated into the system, and depending on the priorities of these values, the Agile technique should most certainly form around the goals that align with the values. But many times, the tech teams doing agile don't align with the business values, and miss their target. Maybe because it is not well communicated, or the programmers don't know how to modify their processes to address the business values. The system may work, but response time is horrendous, or risk management is an after-thought.

Agile needs to be the philosophy to perceive multidimensional business values. Making the effort at the leadership and portfolio level to qualify and quantify value in terms of both strategic value and tactical value; direct revenue and indirect (mission/vision/values) terms is the first step to crafting high level strategic intents. And at tactical level, follow Agile principles to deliver customer value is the core in Agile management and methodology.
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Published on June 25, 2015 23:24
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