Why Employing Agile Coaches next to Scrum Masters Is Unnecessary
If You Take Scrum Seriously, Your Scrum Masters Can Handle the Job

Why Employing Agile Coaches next to Scrum Masters Is Unnecessary

TL; DR: Employing Agile Coaches next to Scrum?Masters?

Often, when organizations employ agile coaches and Scrum Masters, we can observe that agile coaches work at an organizational level. In contrast, Scrum Masters work in a tactical role at the team level in a “delivery manager capacity,” which defies the Scrum Guide’s concept of accountabilities.

However, if you take Scrum seriously, this approach has no upside. Here are my eight reasons for empowering your Scrum Masters to work with the organization.

Disclaimer: I acknowledge, though, that “agile coach” is a helpful keyword for positioning yourself as an agile practitioner; potential employers and clients search for this term.

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The Origin of Separating the Roles of Agile Coaches and Scrum?Masters

The Agile journey is not a “one-size-fits-all” approach. Different organizations will require different strategies for effective Agile transformation, given their unique circumstances, culture, and history. Moreover, the goal of adopting Agile and Scrum is not about implementing a new set of practices or roles but rather about fostering a culture that values collaboration, responsiveness to change, and continuous improvement to reap a competitive advantage. After all, we are not paid to practice Scrum but solve our customers’ problems within the given constraints while contributing to the organization’s sustainability.

The puzzling question is why adopt an approach — here: separating both roles — which has no upside but probably many downsides? Some reasons for this attitude may be the following:

  • Lack of Agile Understanding: Misunderstanding of agile principles often results in organizations defaulting to existing management styles and splitting roles, contradicting the Agile Manifesto’s principles of valuing collaboration and responding to change over following a plan.
  • Fear of Change: Distinguishing between agile coaches and Scrum Masters can reflect resistance to the culture shift that Agile introduces. Consequently, some organizations transitioning from traditional practice may retain existing hierarchies and roles. They inadvertently create a distinction between agile coaches and Scrum Masters, contravening the Scrum Guide’s intention of flattening hierarchies and promoting self-organization.
  • Scaling Misconception: When scaling Scrum, organizations often employ agile coaches to drive organizational change, while Scrum Masters work with individual teams. Contrary to the Agile Manifesto’s emphasis on individuals and interactions, this practice can stem from an erroneous belief that large-scale change requires distinct roles and accountabilities.
  • Misinterpretation of Roles: The Scrum Guide defines the Scrum Master as a servant-leader for the Scrum Team and the organization. However, organizations may mistake this as a tactical role focused on the team level rather than understanding the broader strategic implications, including coaching the organization in Scrum adoption.

In my experience, most issues that prevent a Scrum team from becoming good at what they do — here: creating value for customers while contributing to the organization's sustainability — originate at the organizational level.

You will fail as Scrum Master if you do not consider that and limit yourself to the tactical team level.

Maybe, it is just collateral damage from the growing popularity of SAFe??

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8 Reasons Why Employing Agile Coaches next to Scrum Masters Is Unnecessary

Here is my list of why employing Agile coaches next to Scrum Masters is unnecessary if you take Scrum seriously:

  1. Process Over People: Employing agile coaches could lead to overemphasizing processes and methodologies, whereas the Agile Manifesto emphasizes the importance of valuing individuals and interactions over processes and tools.
  2. Overlap of Responsibilities: There may be some overlap between the responsibilities of agile coaches and Scrum Masters, leading to confusion and potential redundancy in their roles.
  3. Internal Coaching: Organizations can consider developing internal coaching capabilities among existing Scrum Masters or other agile practitioners, making it unnecessary to hire external agile coaches.
  4. Resistance to Change: Introducing agile coaches to the organization could lead to resistance from existing Scrum Masters, who may perceive the new role as a threat or challenge to their accountability.
  5. Expertise Misallocation: Agile coaches possess extensive knowledge of agile methodologies and practices; however, their expertise might be unnecessary if the organization already has a firm grasp of agile practices and employs highly proficient Scrum Masters.
  6. Organizational Maturity: If the organization has already reached a high level of agile maturity, introducing agile coaches may have a limited impact on further improvement.
  7. Limited Scope: An agile coach may be unnecessary if the organization is relatively small or has few Scrum teams. The Scrum Masters can effectively manage the agile transformation and continuous improvement efforts within their teams.
  8. Cultural Mismatch: If the organization’s culture does not align with the values and principles of Agile, introducing agile coaches may not be effective in driving meaningful change, as the coaches could face considerable resistance and barriers to implementing agile practices.

How Can We Overcome the Separation of the?Roles?

Addressing this anti-pattern requires a strategic, transparent, and educational approach from the Scrum Master. Here are some things you can do to overcome the separation of agile coaches and Scrum Masters:

  • Educate and Advocate: Demonstrate the value of the Scrum Master’s role beyond the Scrum team level. Use the Scrum Guide and Agile Manifesto as reference points to highlight how the Scrum Master is an agent of change that promotes agility throughout the organization.
  • Build Alliances: Collaborate with agile coaches, sharing insights and knowledge. The aim is to blur the distinction and foster mutual respect. Make them allies, not competitors, in the pursuit of organizational agility.
  • Create Visibility: Use Retrospectives, Scrum Reviews, and other events to showcase team achievements and articulate the role of the Scrum Master in those successes beyond their contribution at a tactical level.
  • Engage Leadership: Influence organizational leaders to recognize and value the strategic role of Scrum Masters, comprising coaching leaders or inviting them to participate in Scrum events to see firsthand the benefits of the Scrum framework.
  • Seek Outside Help: If internal efforts are not working, consider bringing in an external consultant or trainer to provide an objective perspective and share insights on best practices from other organizations.

Conclusion

Ultimately, the Scrum Master’s role is not confined to a tactical level. They are change agents, promoting and supporting Scrum by helping everyone understand Scrum theory, practices, rules, and values, within teams and the broader organization. Confusion about this role may indicate a need for more in-depth education about Agile and Scrum across the organization.

How do you handle these two roles? Please share your thoughts with us in the comments.

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Why Employing Agile Coaches next to Scrum Masters Is Unnecessary?was first published on Age-of-Product.com.

Eric Dowdell, A-CSM, CSPO, SSM

Technologist | Servant-Leader | Entrepreneur| Cloud & DevOps Enthusiast | Financial Markets Enthusiast

1 年

For mature organizations, it might not be needed since the Scrum Master is also a coach. But most companies are trying to adapt to Scrum or Agile and that requires buy in from the top down. This is where Agile coaches can come in and make an impact from an organizational standpoint so the Scrum Masters are supported with their teams

Vincent Mutzenhardt

Coach Agile Master / R.T.E. passionné. Provocateur d'Agilité. Dynamiteur de statu quo.

1 年

It's The porpose. That every team doesn't coaching. Be able to be resilient, self improved all the time, ... But... it needs time, invests. Implication of everybody. Often, the most important problem it's how the ecosystem works, which is the fluidity of the information. Last but not the least : Is the top management sensibelize to Management 3.0 and or the agile approch of work. Maybe some mistakes in my sentences. Sorry

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Leon Krancher

Agile Coach & Scrum Master

1 年

I agree with you in the sense that Scrum Masters are undervalued and often pigeonholed to be restricted at the team level. The existence of the agile coach role exacerbates this. That said in my experience not all Scrum Masters are good at org design or working with management or even enjoy this bit. So I understand the desire to differentiate here. Maybe it should just all be called scrum master just as there are those that are great at teaching DevOps or Kanban principles. BUt I understand the need

Leon Krancher

Agile Coach & Scrum Master

1 年

On the origin of the name agile coach. It was always my understanding that the name originated from Spotify. The reason being that they had teams that didn't do Scrum, just Kanban, but those teams still needed someone with the Scrum Master skill set. Because a Scum Master by definition is someone that works with scrum they decided to change the name. (Can't find the source though so not 100% sure how I got there) In this meaning it aways made sense to me as in a technically correct type of way. But if this was indeed the origin the current reality has deviated from that quite a bit

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Gian Luca De Bonis

Scrum - Agility - SDLC & Development Management expert, Agile Project Manager, Product Owner, Scrum Coach & Scrum Master, Architect & Software Developer, PowerBuilder expert, Business Owner, IT Entrepreneur

1 年

Stefan Wolpers so consider the following scenario (true story). A company has a Scrum Masters that: - works without Scrum; instead supports processes, non agility, waterfall approach - do HR and not Scrum (report to their boss what the developers tell them, but also help the developers to get benefits; approve vacations) - do not understand the importance of the Sprint Goal; read (for the certificate) about values and empiricism, but forgot to apply them - do whatever the team wants (and specially whatever the PO wants) Now, in this scenario, continuing unchallenged for several years, who is requesting a change? The boss, that gets the hints about developers? Of course not. You need to have a Scrum Leader that understands what is Scrum and Agility about, and remove the Scrum Masters that are not competent, or coach them. Agile coaching requires in any case competence in all the field's area. In software development, this includes: development, QA, dev management expertise, as well as business and organization management. Otherwise the Scrum Master could facilitate when a negotiation is needed, or try to apply fancy and funny methods to business structure. I've seen a lot of these unprofessional approaches. Disaster guaranteed.

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