Did Scrum Kill the Leadership Route?

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6min

Scrum and other Agile methodologies have revolutionised software development, bringing many benefits like improved flexibility and faster delivery. However, they are not without drawbacks. Scrum, with a focus on short-term goals, has the drawback that long-term objectives may seem less important. This may become a significant issue for complex embedded systems. For big projects, with huge codebases and many developers, the importance of (short-term) sprint goals and (long-term) architecture will conflict. Other long-term objectives may have similar issues.

As we have seen in ‘Leading Technical Software Development is Hard! We Must Improve’ leadership is becoming more important, and that the natural growth path for future leaders —in three axes (What, When & How)— has partly vanished. Maybe for the same reason.
In this article, we study whether Scrum did have this undocumented, unintentional negative effect. Later, we will show how to compensate for this.

The Route to Leadership

Once, the route to leadership was straightforward with a natural growth path. Everybody worked in a big team. And so, there were many ‘on the job’ coaches available. A high potential, starting at the lowest step of the ladder could raise many steps before running out of mentors. We didn’t use words like product-owner or scrum master back then, and the term architect had another signification, still, it works along all three axes.

And it worked at multiple levels. A genuine, “high level” leader typically delegated a part of his responsibilities, to an “assistant” in the team, giving her/him the opportunity the learn and grow.
By further delegating a part of the work, there were many natural, informal ways to breed future leaders. And, at the same time, it inspired youngsters about the long-term options.

The Impact of Scrum

Scrum focuses on short-term goals, making the team lean and agile. Every two, three weeks, a team delivers a product-increment, that is fully implemented and tested.

Scrum teams are small, usually 5-10 people. As the software profession grows rapidly a significant part of each team is often young. Resulting is teams that can be relatively immature.
When the (sw) population doubles every few years, 50% of the team is ‘new’ — as (e.g.) showed by UncleBob. With a team of 8, there are only 3 steps to reach the top. In some industries, that is 10 years!

Food for thought: Can we cultivate 3 leaders in 10 years in a single 8-person team?

Long term goals

When the focus is on ‘the sprint’, we need to find ways to balance immediate needs with future aspirations, such as maintaining a robust architectural direction.

Most large-scale Agile/Scrum models, like Spotify’s, SAFe, and LESS, have mechanisms to compensate for the pitfalls of the short-term focus. These include Agile Release Trains (ARTs) and Release Train Engineers (RTE/STE) in SAFe, culture coaches in the Spotify Model, and so-called ‘huge’ products and sprints in LESS. Conceptually, all models build super-sprints (PIs, in SAFe) out of sprints, super-teams (Tribes in Spotify) out of teams, like we build a team out of professionals, a sprint out of working days, etc.
This works well for operational purposes.

However, do they enable coaching on the job for future leaders?

Leadership

All these models demand leaders across the three axes and at each level, but there is often a quiet silence on how to cultivate them. Another pitfall is that higher-level and supporting teams are implemented last, or not at all, and are often invisible.

This invisibility also means young, ambitious people are not motivated to rise beyond the L1 ‘OneTeam’ level.

Natural Growth to Leadership is Broken

The traditional path to becoming a great leader, which relied heavily on natural growth through mentorship and a gradual increase of responsibility, has been disrupted. Moreover, due to role-name inflation, and because genuine leaders are often invisible, the path has become unclear.
So, we can conclude the natural growth path is broken!

The question is still: is this due to Scrum? And more important, can we fix it again?
For that, we have two sub-questions.

  1. How can we elect future leaders?

  2. How can we inspire potential leaders to step up to this ‘new’ path?

The alternative is not an option!
As we have seen, people can reach a local top in about 10 years, and then often stop growing. Do we accept they are standing still for the remaining 30 years of a career? Remember, the current growth predictions imply the need for thousands of L1 leaders and hundreds on L2 level and higher.
The industries need those (future) leaders. We need to prepare the path and make it appealing again.

Don’t blame Agile

One thing we shouldn’t do is blame Agile or Scrum. Most large-scale frameworks have instruments to compensate. As we have described, they exist, but many companies only pick the low-hanging fruit…
More importantly, they have many advantages too. Fighting to go back is useless.

Restore the path

The mere fact that people do not work in big teams anymore doesn’t imply we can’t use the old, proven pattern to grow individuals anymore. We only have to organise the former informal ways explicitly.

We can take inspiration from the big-scale agile models: create virtual teams of potential and proven leaders. In those expertise teams, we learn from each other and grow.

Make it precious

The key to developing hundreds and thousands of future leaders is to inspire many individuals to explore their options.
Not everyone will become a great leader, and that’s okay. We will always need a large number of excellent programmers! Without them, there is no need for leaders.

In SAFe terms, we require numerous product owners to define the product, as well as many SM, RTE, and STE to guide the process. Additionally, we need many architectural leaders.
They are needed to guide those foreseen ten thousand new engineers, which are needed because the world demands ever bigger, more complex embedded systems.

However, if none of the current engineers are willing to step up, if no L1 leader is motivated to grow, and the current leaders will retire, who will guide the development of those fantastic machines?

As we need future leaders, we need to begin today. This involves not only providing training but also ensuring that the classes are well attended.
In short: Software engineers should become motivated to grow again.

Summary

Lean, Agile approaches, like Scrum, do not conflict with long-term goals. All major big-scale approaches, like SAFe, LESS, Spotify, and Scrum-of-Scrum, have processes and tools to counter the disadvantages of a strong focus on the short term. However, they are not always implemented.
Even though they endorse having leaders in all 3 axes — what (product), when (process) & how (architecture), they take for granted that those authorities are accessible.
Little is written on how to breed those leaders.

At the same time, we have seen that those efficient, flexible, small teams are too small to grow future leaders. The time when those people naturally “bubbled up” is gone!
A kind of counter-movement has occurred, where the top performers in a small team got the roles-names that once belonged to authorities in the full organisation. Nowadays, there is sometimes an architect in every 5-8 software engineers. This title inflation in itself isn’t bad (but maybe sad), it happens everywhere.

Unfortunately, the combination of limited coaching through small teams and title inflation has blurred the path to leadership. How can a youngster ever become a future, genuine authority without visible role models? Especially as the number of software engineers grows strongly. As does the number of architects, scrummasters, and even product-owners.

In an upcoming article, “Can I Breed Natural (SW) Leaders?”, we will present some ideas on how to cultivate future software leaders effectively. But first, we study some case in ‘No leaders, no appeal!’.

Have fun, and grow! —

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