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+++
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title = "Agile vs Culture: The Story of Outliners"
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date = 2015-12-18
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[taxonomies]
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tags = ["agile", "book", "empowerment", "disenfranchise"]
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+++
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When the culture goes against agile.
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<!-- more -->
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![The Agile cycle](/images/agile.jpg)
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In some recent agile conferences I went this year, I've been recalling and
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telling one story from
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[Outliners](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3228917-outliers)
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(which I wrongly assumed it was part of
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[Freakonomics](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1202.Freakonomics)
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about the number of accidents in Asian and South American
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airlines. The book points that there is a cultural difference between those
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two and American people, in which the former see a larger distance between
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them and their superiores than the later.
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Why I keep recalling this? Because in agile teams, there is no hierarchy: the
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PO is as important as the junior developer; the tester has the same input
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value as the senior developer. This means that the team doesn't need to wait
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for someone higher in the chain to make a decision: the team is free to make
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their own decisions on how to better reach the value requested by the PO.
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In all events I went, there is a constant problem on "how do I make my team
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see the value in Agile" and "why Agile doesn't work". Again, it seems that
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Agile goes straight against the cultural reference South Americans -- in this
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case, me and my colleagues -- because we are cultural trained about that guy
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who is in a higher place in the chain and, thus, I depend on him on the
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important questions (for whatever value of "important" I believe a solution
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is).
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In the end, it's not as much as changing a company development model and
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explaining to managers and directors on how the software -- and its value
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-- will be delivered, but fighting against the cultural norm of having
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someone in a very high place that can make decisions while people think they
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are very low in the chain to make a decision. Not counting the constant fear
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of being wrong (which is actually good in agile).
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The problem revolves not only on this point, but also in the assumed position
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based on role name. Someone will assume that because their position is
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"developer", it means that they are below -- and receive orders from --
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the PO; someone will assume that because someone's else role is tester and
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their are designed as developer, they are up in hierarchy and, thus, can order
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the tester to do whatever they think it must be done.
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Here we have a second problem: we need to detect and empower those who think
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they are below in the chain and "disenfranchise" those who think they are
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above everyone else due the role name.
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My plan for 2016 is to read some books about those topics and bring this
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dicussion to future events. Which me luck. ;)
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