Under Threat by Digital Natives? Empower Small Teams utilizing Agile Techniques to Stay Ahead

Mark Bridges
5 min readDec 9, 2018

Digital natives are threatening the way traditional organizations do business. The dated authoritative structures and imposing mindsets of the executives of traditional companies are in stark contrast to today’s technology-savvy startups and digital-native companies.

Traditional firms are running out of time to revisit their strategies and promptly transform in accordance with the rapidly evolving markets and business environment. They need to focus their attention towards eliminating bureaucratic challenges, such as resource scarcity, fragmented processes, siloed environments, as well as lack of innovation. Conventionally-run business entities can learn a few tricks from agile organizations.

Agile companies develop small teams — comprising a few people who possess the required key skills to accomplish strategic initiatives — as their basic organizational unit. Rather than converging information technology professionals in a centralized department, agile firms group software designers and engineers in individual teams, to work uninhibited on high-yielding initiatives.

This necessitates the senior leaders to create an enabling environment for the small teams to flourish, by offering them adequate authority required to match the pace of the digital economy, equipping them with top talent, offering suitable tools to act promptly, and constantly gauging their performance. The leaders need to let the small teams make everyday decisions independently, allow them to escalate the judgments only in dire circumstances, and take time-consuming administrative tasks off of them.

The approach for the organizations to empower small teams and smoothly transition to Agile way of working consists of 4 key steps:

  1. Create independent teams in impactful areas
  2. Place strong performers on the independent teams
  3. Provide teams with a clear view of their customer
  4. Allocate resources up front and hold teams accountable

Let’s take a deep dive into the 4 steps to empower small teams.

Create Independent Teams in Impactful Areas

The first step for an organization to embrace Agile method of working is to create independent teams in impactful areas. Autonomy is clearly beneficial for team building, particularly for teams working on functions serving the customer directly or affecting customers’ experience.

It is equally important that the executives choose teams of people possessing different skills and capabilities.

Place Strong Performers on the Independent Teams

The second step to a smooth transition to Agile ways of working is to place strong performers on independent teams from the start. Senior executives are often reluctant to put their top performers on autonomous teams — considering the task far from being mission critical — since their inclination is to rather have them engaged in strategic endeavors.

Selecting the right, talented people paves the way for the teams to thrive and helps train managers shortlist and create more autonomous teams.

Provide Teams with a Clear View of their Customer

The third step in empowering small teams is to provide the teams with a clear view of their customer. Agile and digital-native companies place a consistent emphasis on improving customer experiences which offers the independent team an opportunity to have a clear and consistent perception of business priorities.

Allocate Resources Up-front and Hold Teams Accountable

The last step for an organization to embrace the Agile way of working is to allocate resources up-front and hold teams accountable. Teams working on client-facing roles almost always acquire the resources, information, consents, and finances required for new projects. Their issue is not scarcity but rather sluggishness. Senior executives need to meaningfully measure the teams’ achievement, hold teams accountable for delivering outcomes, and promptly reassign resources from under-performing projects to encouraging ones.

To manage and motivate autonomous empowered teams, training and coaching mid-level managers to adopt new behaviors to enable the teams function in a truly agile way is critical. This is often challenging for managers developed in traditional organizations. The 3 critical mindsets which should be encouraged in managers working to empower small teams include:

  1. Define outcomes — then let teams chart their own path toward them
  2. Participate in the team’s “stand-up” meetings to enable their success
  3. Commit to retraining managers for their redefined roles

Interested in gaining more understanding on how to effectively Empower Small Teams? You can learn more and download an editable PowerPoint about Empowering Small Teams here on the Flevy documents marketplace.

Do You Find Value in This Framework?

You can download in-depth presentations on this and hundreds of similar business frameworks from the FlevyPro Library. FlevyPro is trusted and utilized by 1000s of management consultants and corporate executives. Here’s what some have to say:

“My FlevyPro subscription provides me with the most popular frameworks and decks in demand in today’s market. They not only augment my existing consulting and coaching offerings and delivery, but also keep me abreast of the latest trends, inspire new products and service offerings for my practice, and educate me in a fraction of the time and money of other solutions. I strongly recommend FlevyPro to any consultant serious about success.”

– Bill Branson, Founder at Strategic Business Architects

“As a niche strategic consulting firm, Flevy and FlevyPro frameworks and documents are an on-going reference to help us structure our findings and recommendations to our clients as well as improve their clarity, strength, and visual power. For us, it is an invaluable resource to increase our impact and value.”

– David Coloma, Consulting Area Manager at Cynertia Consulting

“As a small business owner, the resource material available from FlevyPro has proven to be invaluable. The ability to search for material on demand based our project events and client requirements was great for me and proved very beneficial to my clients. Importantly, being able to easily edit and tailor the material for specific purposes helped us to make presentations, knowledge sharing, and toolkit development, which formed part of the overall program collateral. While FlevyPro contains resource material that any consultancy, project or delivery firm must have, it is an essential part of a small firm or independent consultant’s toolbox.”

– Michael Duff, Managing Director at Change Strategy (UK)

“FlevyPro has been a brilliant resource for me, as an independent growth consultant, to access a vast knowledge bank of presentations to support my work with clients. In terms of RoI, the value I received from the very first presentation I downloaded paid for my subscription many times over! The quality of the decks available allows me to punch way above my weight — it’s like having the resources of a Big 4 consultancy at your fingertips at a microscopic fraction of the overhead.”

– Roderick Cameron, Founding Partner at SGFE Ltd

“Several times a month, I browse FlevyPro for presentations relevant to the job challenge I have (I am a consultant). When the subject requires it, I explore further and buy from the Flevy Marketplace. On all occasions, I read them, analyze them. I take the most relevant and applicable ideas for my work; and, of course, all this translates to my and my clients’ benefits.”

– Omar Hernán Montes Parra, CEO at Quantum SFE

--

--

Mark Bridges

I blog about various management frameworks, from Strategic Planning to Digital Transformation to Change Management. https://flevy.com