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5 ways to master agile collaboration

Teamwork makes the dream work, but how do you make your teams work well? Effective collaboration is a vital part of what it means to be an agile business, but many organisations simply stop thinking about this once they’ve assembled their teams. Here’s what they should be doing instead
Mastering Agile Collaboration In The Workplace

Tra­di­tion­al approach­es to col­lab­o­ra­tion are as out­dat­ed as the fax machine. While most busi­ness­es have now digi­tised, many have per­mit­ted his­toric gaps between depart­ments’ cul­tures to widen, lead­ing to dishar­mo­ny and a sti­fling of inno­va­tion.

The chasm between clas­sic team­work and the real­i­ty after the Covid-19 lock­downs is stark. For most busi­ness­es, remote work­ing arrived in a flash with Covid-19, and many are still strug­gling to clar­i­fy expec­ta­tions, pre­vent exclu­sion and cre­ate team envi­ron­ments which are pos­i­tive spaces for ideation. Among staff con­cerned about home work­ing, 75% say team col­lab­o­ra­tion has floun­dered, accord­ing to research by Lucid Soft­ware. 

Top-per­form­ing busi­ness­es are tak­ing a dif­fer­ent approach, though, adopt­ing more mutu­al­ly ben­e­fi­cial ways of work­ing, effec­tive lead­er­ship by exam­ple, and the clever use of tools. Their strate­gies are pay­ing off through sharp­er respon­sive­ness to emerg­ing trends. Here are five key behav­iours busi­ness­es can adopt to fol­low their lead.

1

Foster a culture of psychological safety

Busi­ness­es first need to cre­ate a set­ting where col­lab­o­ra­tion flour­ish­es. Daniel New­man is a found­ing part­ner at Futu­rum Research and notes the “utmost impor­tance” of pos­i­tive work­ing envi­ron­ments post-lock­­­downs. “Remote and hybrid work exac­er­bate the impor­tance of cul­ture because some of the non-ver­bal cues and rela­­tion­­ship-build­ing that used to occur has been lost,” he explains.

While offices nat­u­ral­ly fos­ter human con­nec­tions, remote work­ing does not. At cus­tomer rela­tion­ship man­age­ment busi­ness Hub­Spot, a cul­tur­al­ly care­ful pre-pan­dem­ic move to hybrid work­ing improved pro­duc­tiv­i­ty lev­els and morale, and 88% of staff now oper­ate at least par­tial­ly out­side the office. Meaghan Williams, the company’s man­ag­er of hybrid enable­ment, says the chal­lenge for employ­ers is to retain authen­tic inter­ac­tion. “Con­nec­tion and col­lab­o­ra­tion go hand in hand, but it’s going to take inten­tion­al­i­ty, intro­spec­tion and ideation for com­pa­nies to get it right,” she observes.

Shared psy­cho­log­i­cal safe­ty under­pins for­ward-think­ing team­work. “That’s the start­ing point because col­lab­o­ra­tion and shar­ing ideas involve vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty and a leap of faith,” explains Con­stance Hadley, an organ­i­sa­tion­al psy­chol­o­gist and lec­tur­er at Boston University’s Que­strom School of Busi­ness. “Peo­ple need to feel com­fort­able and safe enough to ask what they fear might be stu­pid ques­tions.”

2

Encourage experimentation

The next nat­ur­al step is to sup­port employ­ees’ devel­op­ment of ideas. To keep evolv­ing, com­pa­nies must ensure their peo­ple are incen­tivised to exper­i­ment in their teams, put for­ward shared con­cepts and take healthy risks.

Achiev­ing this means com­mit­ting to the cre­ation of the right incen­tives and con­di­tions for staff, Hadley explains. “It needs to be the norm for new ideas to emerge, even from the fail­ure of oth­er ideas. If you’re ask­ing for ideas, it’s crit­i­cal to com­mu­ni­cate what you’re try­ing to achieve, to set para­me­ters, to reward peo­ple for their con­tri­bu­tions and to allo­cate fund­ing behind good con­cepts.” Forum dis­cus­sions, and oth­er oppor­tu­ni­ties for non-work catchups, can be crit­i­cal ele­ments of such an envi­ron­ment.

The most suc­cess­ful com­pa­nies strike a care­ful bal­ance of “enabling both exper­i­men­ta­tion and fail­ure, with rapid agili­ty and adap­ta­tion to get to the right result faster”, New­man notes. Proac­tive com­pa­nies want to see exper­i­men­ta­tion because they took con­fi­dence from the changes achieved dur­ing the pan­dem­ic, when the con­cepts of fail­ing fast and fail­ing for­ward enabled rapid learn­ing.

3

Introduce agile leadership expertise

Com­pa­ny boss­es must lead by exam­ple in col­lab­o­ra­tion, per­haps by show­ing vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty and a will­ing­ness to learn. On a gran­u­lar lev­el, expert coach­es can help to shape team mind­sets. Tze Lin Kui is a senior agile coach at the mar­ket intel­li­gence com­pa­ny GfK. He explains that he aims to “enable and con­nect peo­ple so they col­lab­o­ra­tive­ly work to solve prob­lems”, whether that’s through facil­i­tat­ed meet­ings or work­shops. “Peo­ple can be defen­sive of their own ideas,” he says. “One of the con­se­quences is that those who are pas­sive with­draw from the dis­cus­sion, even if they have great ideas.”

Team lead­ers should aim to elim­i­nate ego from the cul­ture, cre­at­ing instead a shared suc­cess envi­ron­ment, accord­ing to Ahmed Sid­ky, an expert advis­ing com­pa­nies on cul­ti­vat­ing agile thought process­es. “The agile mind­set is based on know­ing we now live in a flu­id, uncer­tain world,” he says. “Fail­ure is impor­tant and inevitable. The goal is to learn ear­ly and fail fast, not tak­ing any­thing per­son­al­ly.” Ongo­ing trans­for­ma­tion­al learn­ing is the key to estab­lish­ing these more pro­duc­tive mind­sets, he explains: “It goes much deep­er than train­ing. You have to get to the core of the way peo­ple think to dri­ve behav­iour and ulti­mate­ly agili­ty.”

Dyna­trace mon­i­tors sys­tem infra­struc­ture and the user expe­ri­ence. The company’s lead­ers laid the ground for remote work­ing pre-pan­dem­ic, by fine-tun­ing the employ­ee expe­ri­ence. The company’s founder and CTO, Bernd Greifened­er, says: “One of the most crit­i­cal steps was to reimag­ine cor­po­rate IT as an employ­ee dig­i­tal enable­ment group.” The group sim­pli­fied rou­tine process­es and enabled staff to col­lab­o­rate with any­one in a sim­i­lar time zone. Mean­while, with employ­ees com­mut­ing at least twice a month, offices were rebrand­ed as col­lab­o­ra­tion spaces, so employ­ees “don’t see their jour­ney to the office as ‘going to work’”.

4

Ensure meetings are focused, but encourage natural connections

Lean­ness is an essen­tial part of col­lab­o­ra­tive effi­cien­cy, which means meet­ings must have a clear run­ning order and involve only those staff need­ed. With meet­ing fre­quen­cy ris­ing 153% dur­ing the pan­dem­ic, accord­ing to Microsoft Teams data, many com­pa­nies are seek­ing to elim­i­nate unnec­es­sary ses­sions. 

At GfK, meet­ings are opti­mised and time-lim­it­ed, with clear goals and only the right per­son­nel present. But there is simul­ta­ne­ous­ly a focus on fos­ter­ing nat­ur­al and enjoy­able con­nec­tions. Kui explains: “In my teams, we stan­dard­ise the types of meet­ings we need and we time­box each type of meet­ing. At the organ­i­sa­tion­al lev­el, we set aside time for fun learn­ing and inno­v­a­tive activ­i­ties such as train­ing, work­shops and hackathons. This all helps to gen­er­ate new ideas.”

By con­trast, at com­pa­nies that have opt­ed to ban meet­ings entire­ly, open-end­ed con­ver­sa­tions are often missed the most, experts note, with many of those busi­ness­es even­tu­al­ly rein­stat­ing week­ly check-ins to see how staff are doing. Many have also moved to ensure remote employ­ees can engage social­ly online or attend offices sev­er­al times a month, so that more casu­al dis­cus­sion and rap­­port-build­ing can take place.

5

Use supporting tools well

While prac­tices, cul­ture and process­es are the main dri­vers of col­lab­o­ra­tive suc­cess, tech­nol­o­gy is a key enabler. At Hub­Spot, the right tools and edu­ca­tion were key to over­com­ing time zone dif­fer­ences while keep­ing teams moti­vat­ed and aligned. “In addi­tion to pro­vid­ing resources for asyn­chro­nous com­mu­ni­ca­tion, we use tools like Loom, Lucidspark and Slack to help dri­ve hybrid col­lab­o­ra­tion at scale,” Williams says.

Sim­ple tech-based changes can also improve the flu­id­i­ty of day-to-day col­lab­o­ra­tions. As well as mov­ing inter­nal appli­ca­tions to the cloud, Dyna­trace has reduced the scale of its ser­vices requir­ing vir­tu­al pri­vate net­work access and intro­duced sin­gle sign-on sys­tems to stream­line access to its col­lab­o­ra­tion plat­forms.

Ulti­mate­ly, though, some team­work tools can still hin­der col­lab­o­ra­tion by gen­er­at­ing a del­uge of unstruc­tured com­mu­ni­ca­tion. “Man­agers are spend­ing a great deal of time writ­ing emails or doing one-to-ones because they can’t as eas­i­ly con­duct the meet­ings that would help them find out what’s going on with­in their teams,” Hadley warns. 

After all, per­haps it will only be when AI tools can tru­ly triage and answer rou­tine inter­nal com­mu­ni­ca­tions that man­agers will have the time to real­ly focus on enabling col­lab­o­ra­tion.