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“Doing Agile” Is Only Part of the Software Delivery Pie

Being Agile enables the delivery of the right value at the right time. When most people talk about this, they think about the core technical skills required in the action of delivering software. This is only part of the Agile software delivery pie.

SFIA does very well in articulating the skills, competencies, and attributes across different disciplines (which include information technology, digital transformation, and software engineering).

Specifically, these skills fall into one of four categories:

  • Engineering Skills. These are the skills and competencies required for building brand-new valuable software.
  • Technician Skills. These represent the skills and competencies required for maintaining and operating the software delivered to stakeholders.
  • Framework/Process Skills. These represent the specific knowledge required to support engineering or technician skills, for example, Scrum, SAFe, and Kanban.
  • Tools Skills. Represents software that helps you deliver software. Some examples include Azure DevOps and Jira.

These represent the hard skills needed to do Agile. While these are important, they are not the whole story. To effectively deliver software, we believe in the importance of being Agile over simply doing Agile.

Our Take

While doing Agile is important, it does not enable the effective delivery of value to stakeholders. Doing Agile represents the hard skills required to put working software into production using an agile method. Unfortunately, working software alone doesn’t create value. To effectively deliver, we believe in the importance of being Agile over simply doing Agile.

Enterprise Agile coach Matt Hosking says, "Ultimately though, the 'essence' of agility and from where people actually get the real benefits are in the soft skills - the 'being agile', rather than 'doing agile'."

At Info-Tech, we are aligned with the distinction between the different classes of skills and directly tying them to being vs. doing Agile. However, we have a different view of what it means to be Agile.

Doing Agile is all about going through the motions and carrying out the actions required to deliver. For example, user story writing, doing standups, ceremonies, and retrospectives are all important skills required to do Agile.

However, to be Agile, you need a change in thinking and behavior, which we call Agile skills. These Agile skills come from traits and values I previously discussed in Agile Skills Don’t Revolve Around Ceremonies and Procedures: They’re About Traits and Values. For example, embracing the unknown, collaboration, analytical thinking, ability to learn, embracing risk, and willingness to innovate.

Everybody who aspires to be an Agile organization needs to understand and embrace the appropriate Agile skills that work in your context. This is in addition to the engineering, framework, technician, and tools skills that are articulated by SFIA.


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