Blog Posts Business Management

What Colors are on your Agile Coaching Palette?

Blog: Agile Adoption Roadmap

For those that advocate for Agile within their organization or help organizations adopt Agile, often times the career development is opportunistic based on the work ahead. This helps the Agile advocate at one level in gaining experience but can prevent the more methodical learning.  At some point, isn’t it good to be in the driver’s seat of your own growth? 

For example, if the Agile advocate (e.g., Agile Coach) only has team level coaching opportunities, they will never gain the experience and skills needed to coach at a management or organization level.  If the Agile advocate only has Scrum based opportunities, they will not gain the experience of working with Kanban, Lean Development, or scaled frameworks.  Instead a methodical component to their development must be incorporated.  This is where the Agile Coaching Palette can be useful.  

The Agile Coaching Palette provides a colorful approach to better understand what Agile capabilities and experience an Agile advocate currently has and then provides an incremental approach to explore, learn, experience opportunities in the future based on gaps and interest. An Agile Coaching Palette provides the Agile advocate with what is artistically known as the colors they bring to their work.

These colors represent several key facets (IMHO) of what it means to be an Agile Coach or advocate.  They are the agile experience acquired, levels coached, agile roles played, agile processes implemented, business and technical practices applied, agile training delivered, agile change management and soft skills applied, agile certifications acquired, and giving back to the agile community in the form of articles and presentations.  While there may be other areas of focus, I have found that these tend to cover most of the important Agile areas. 
Those who benefit most from the Agile Coaching Palette are the Agile advocates who play a role as Agile Coach, Agile Champion, Agile Sponsor, Team level advocates (e.g., ScrumMasters, product owner, etc), and Agile leaders of any kind who are looking to advance in their Agile journey. The Palette approach reminds those on their agile journey of the many areas they may desire to experience, learn, and play along the way.

Based on real experience, the Agile Coaching Palette is a methodical and incremental approach in helping you consider what you may want to do next, depending on where you’ve been and more importantly where you would like to go.  The “where you would like to go” is meant to be applied in an incremental manner.  Usually somewhere around 3 to 6 months gives them enough time to make progress but short enough to reflect on where they’ve been and where they want to go next.  
If you are an Agile advocate, consider trying an Agile Coaching Palette approach to help you better shape and color your future.  First start by establishing your current state with the key facets mentioned about.  Then, commit to an increment of improvement based on your interests or gaps.  It will help you be more laser focused on your future!

Leave a Comment

Get the BPI Web Feed

Using the HTML code below, you can display this Business Process Incubator page content with the current filter and sorting inside your web site for FREE.

Copy/Paste this code in your website html code:

<iframe src="https://www.businessprocessincubator.com/content/what-colors-are-on-your-agile-coaching-palette/?feed=html" frameborder="0" scrolling="auto" width="100%" height="700">

Customizing your BPI Web Feed

You can click on the Get the BPI Web Feed link on any of our page to create the best possible feed for your site. Here are a few tips to customize your BPI Web Feed.

Customizing the Content Filter
On any page, you can add filter criteria using the MORE FILTERS interface:

Customizing the Content Filter

Customizing the Content Sorting
Clicking on the sorting options will also change the way your BPI Web Feed will be ordered on your site:

Get the BPI Web Feed

Some integration examples

BPMN.org

XPDL.org

×