Running Agile

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Archive for the ‘Team Performance’ Category

Happy fools

Posted by Christophe on February 7, 2009

incompetence

Dr David A. Dunning, professor of psychology at Cornell University studies accuracy and illusion in human judgment.

His findings are clear and to be considered seriously: incompetent people just don’t know how bad they are. Worse, they think very strong about themselves, more than people who are actually good . Why? Simply because people who are awful at something lack the judgment skill or knowledge to recognize their incompetence or evaluate someone else qualities.

This has a lot of implications for you:

  • You do some things poorly and don’t know about it
  • Your self evaluation is tinted
  • You judgment of the performance of others is frequently wrong

Now think about the above in the context of yearly performance appraisals, interviews of candidates, promotion requests, and day to day when people disagree on how to fix a problem…

What can you do if you can’t judge? Simply don’t!

Don’t get angry at poor performers that just don’t see it. Train them if you can, replace them if you can’t. Don’t take it personally and more on.

There are many reasons not to do performance appraisals. Instead, engage them in personal introspection, and provide them with a clear vision and frequent feedback.

During interviews, don’t ask candidates how good they are at specific tasks (“what are your strengths / weaknesses?”). Instead, question them about how they specifically handled a given situation, what they would do different today about it.

I think this is a great blog post. So now I wonder…

Posted in Communication, Management, Recruiting, Team Performance | Tagged: , , , | 2 Comments »

Mike Cohn on “Succeeding With Agile: A Guide To Transitioning”

Posted by Christophe on August 9, 2008

In this presentation filmed during Agile 2007, Mike Cohn talks about the transitioning process towards an agile organization, why the process is inherently difficult, and what it takes to see self-organization emerging in a previously tightly controlled environment

Posted in Agile2007, Mike Cohn, Team Performance, Videos | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Death by appraisal

Posted by Christophe on May 11, 2008

Yearly appraisals, ratings and rankings are devised to kill your teams.

For most teams, each person’s achievement is all commingled with the other members of the team. Trying to pull out individual performance is futile. Emphasizing or rating individual performance undermines collaboration. Individual skills are only a small part of the performance equation anyway. The quality of management, the environment and organization culture are major factors in individual performance. And most rating and ranking schemes ignore those factors.

So appraisals, ratings and rankings engender unhealthy competition, not collaboration, not efficiency, not product success. Every company does it, but what good has this really done for you? Nothing! It’s really silly and makes no sense.

Oh wait, disabusing poor performers by letting them know they are at the bottom of the barrel will spur motivation and greater efforts, right? Most people believe they are above average performers so this accomplishes quite the opposite.

And when everyone does a great job on the team, what use is there telling someone they’re at the bottom?

The best time to really screw up is to provide people with a loose and uncanny review year end, or on their hiring date anniversary – how sentimental. Why waste a year, 6 months or even weeks and keep inadequate performance continue?

While appraisals do nothing at best, do let your people know how they are doing, in the present, as close to the event as feasible. Sweet and short. Direct and frequent.

Once in while, step back and look at your whole team. Manage your C players to another job, where they can be successful – within your company – or out. For everyone else, follow Esther Derby’s tips and engage them on these questions:

  • What were the major events of the year?
  • What have been the major accomplishments?
  • What new skills have you acquired?
  • What have been your struggles?
  • What contributed to those situations?
  • What insights do you have, looking back on the year?
  • What are you most proud of?
  • How does this inform us going into next year?
  • What do you want to do better?
  • Are there new areas you want to explore?
  • What skills or capabilities will you develop?
  • How can we build developing those capabilities into daily work?
  • How will we tell you’re making progress?

Do not discuss a letter or number rating or ranking. Just talk.
Have a separate conversation about salary increases.

For more depth on on one one management, read Esther Derby‘s book Behind Closed Doors: Secrets of Great Management.

And if your company insists on annual appraisals, establish a system that that carries more weight on the team than the individual. Avoid ranking or skill set scoring. Instead, focus on the scope of influence someone has. I already wrote on how to do reviews in agile teams with Jeff Sutherland’s review process. You should also consider teaching your teams how to rate themselves. Scary? most teams don’t inflate their own grades – unless the system drives that behavior.

Posted in Esther Derby, Leadership, Management, Team Performance | Tagged: , , , | 2 Comments »

Managers are from Mars, Performance Appraisals from Venus

Posted by Christophe on February 2, 2008

I attended to the Agile Bazaar event on January 31 2008 at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute where Mary Poppendieck presented “Appraisals and Compensation: The Elephant in the Room“. She will likely do presentation it again at the Agile 2008 conference in toronto. Not to spoil it, I will only give the thread line.

Dilbert - Appraisal 2

Mary went through a brief history of performance appraisals. While it all started 2,000 years ago in china, appraisals became universal (in the US) in the 90s.

So if every companies uses them, they must be extremely useful, right? Unfortunately not.

Mary exposed 8 underlying purposes supporting the mechanism (to name a few: motivatation of employees, identification of candidates for promotion, identification of training needs) and 6 faulty assumptions (including motivation as an external factor, focusing on the individual -or team- rather than the system and the delay of mainly negative feedback) .

Mary says that there is no valid research showing benefits of performance appraisals. Simply said, “it doesn’t work“. Her biggest complain is that appraisals target individuals (sometimes teams) rather the system itself. She also condemns judgment rather than feedback (system dynamic).

Mary went over the false assumptions behind individual pay-for-performance (money, motivation, individual assessment), and the negative effects they have on the system.

She finished by a case study done by HP across 13 organizations over a year 4 year period where each division implemented a different type of incentive plan. The results are just mind boggling. They all failed and got canceled.

So what is she proposing to do instead?

Provide every day for

  1. clear goals and priorities
  2. team work
  3. pride
  4. feedback
  5. cadence
  6. continuous improvement

The key here is that yearly of bi-annual appraisals are replaced by a daily engagement of management with the team. Promotions and salary adjustment are evaluated (team wide) on a regular basis – rather than once per year.

Mary closed saying that focus on training, delegation of the decision making process within an egalitarian culture, good pay and reciprocal commitment between the employees and the company are the pillars for high performance.

She also discussed a case study made around a large experiment done by HP. Wanna hear the punch line? Come by agile 08…

Now, if your organization is still mandating appraisal, check out Jeff Sutherland’s review process.

Dilbert - Appraisal 1


Posted in Agile Bazaar, Dilbert, Mary Poppendieck, Team Performance | Tagged: , , , | 5 Comments »

Review process for agile team members

Posted by Christophe on January 22, 2008

Performance reviews and compensation questions are frequently on the front seat. It is possibly one of the most deeply rooted problem to get rid of when working with agile teams.

According to Jeff Sutherland, “surveys show that 90% of companies report ratings don’t work but they still keep doing them. It is kind of like the waterfall process. In the face of overwhelming failure people keep repeating the mistake.

Mary Poppendieck summarized this yesterday:

Using money as a motivator is like playing with dynamite because money is a VERY effective motivator. Monetary rewards motivate people to do EXACTLY what is being rewarded – not necessarily what the organization intended to reward, but EXACTLY what is being measured to generate the reward. Therefore monetary motivators have a long track record of generating unintended consequences. If there is any apparent competition for the money, money motivates people to get as much as they can for themselves. Thus monetary motivators have a track record of suppressing collaboration. Finally, bonuses for performance rapidly come to be an expected part of the landscape, replacing passion and dedication as motivators . These are things you probably cannot change about using money as a motivator.

A great book on the subject: Abolishing Performance Appraisals: Why They Backfire and What to Do Instead

So I asked Jeff what he is doing when you have to do performance ratings. He said that “you must take into consideration why they do not work in general and use a collaborative style to avoid the pitfalls.

Jeff wrote a memo in 1996 on how to conduct such reviews. After contemplating many options, I think his review process is best (if you have to do one).

I kindly clarified some sections to pass the approval of our employment lawyers. Please check Jeff’s original post for reference.

==========

Review Process for Agile Team Employees

Objective

  • Create a rating process to surface disparities between market perception, customer perception, company perception, team perception, manager perception, and individual employee perception of their own performance
  • Create a simplified process so frequent feedback can be communicated to employees (quarterly)
  • Incorporate a team score and an individual score into a performance score

The Review Process

The employee’s focus is to please the customer and meet their manager’s expectations in fulfilling their job responsibilities. This review process is forged as a collaborative rating system (360 degree feedback) and creates an accurate and realistic scoring without rating inflation by focusing attention on the user’s experience of the project or product being developed, along with time to deliver or market. The subjective experience of the manager is deemphasized. It requires raters to all work closely with one another to check ratings.

The Process Takes Three Meetings to Initialize

Meeting 1

Manager meets with employee and goes over the document. The employee is then asked to write his own individual review after the meeting by responding to the key individual performance questions (see below) and rate him/herself. The employee should be specific and concise and cite specific examples where appropriate. This review is designed to minimize the amount of writing that is general or vague.

Meeting 2

The second meeting occurs when the employee returns the review (along with soft copy). The manager discusses the employee’s perceptions to get a good understanding of them. After the meeting the manager carefully edits the review to incorporate his/her, the product team, senior management and customers’ perception of performance.

To gather the individual performance from the team, the manager sends a rating request using the rating scale below.

The employee’s 360 feedback will be a rating score based on the following percentages:

  • Team performance as per executive management: 25%
  • Team Rating of Individual’s Performance: 25%
  • Manager’s assessment of performance: 50%

Meeting 3

The third meeting occurs after the manager has finished editing the review and the ratings. The updated document is discussed with the employee. Any differences in perceptions is discussed and noted accordingly. If there are disagreements regarding assessments, the employee will have an opportunity to give feedback. If there are any changes in the assessments they will be incorporated into the final review and signed off by the employee and Supervisor. The employee’s signature does not imply agreement but acknowledges receipt.

Team Performance

Performance Objectives will be determined by senior management and will be appropriate to the Team. The score will be based on the rating score below.

Team Rating of Individual’s Performance

Each selected individual will be asked to give an assessment of the employee’s work performance based on the rating scored listed below. The score is calculated as an average.

Manager’s Assessment of Performance

The manager rates the employee on a set of questions that drives the review process away from a standard list of items accomplished. These items are used to justify responses to the questions. These questions are designed to focus the performance review on the issues that are critical to company and department success. The questions lead the discussion away from the reviewer’s personal opinions and focus the discussion on the impact this person has on the work or the department.

In most circumstances, the rating scores of the manager, the team and senior management will be close. When this occurs the weighted average will be the final score. If ratings are widely different, the most extreme rating supersedes the lower.

Customer’s ratings supersede senior management, who supersedes the team who supersedes the manager.

Example 1:

  • Manager’s score: 5
  • Team’s score (of individual as an average): 7
  • Senior Management’s score: 5

We treat a 5 as no opinion. Team determines the result with a 7.

Example 2:

  • Manager score: 5
  • Team score (of individual as an average): 2
  • Senior Management score: 3

This person did not meet expectations of the team or the senior management. He/She is a 2 or 3. This appears that the manager is not managing the employee. How can a person meet the manager’s expectation but not meet the team or senior management’s expectations. A discussion with the manager is needed by their Supervisor.

There may be a unique case where one bad event is exaggerated and the manager feels the person is being treated unfairly. In this case, the highest score would be a 4 and the employee would be informed that this is an action item that they and the Supervisor would need to work together to devise an action plan to get the team members to raise the score.

Rating Scale

10. Trade and blog journals are writing rave reviews about employee’s work saying it is best in its class

9. Customers (externally/internally) are writing rave reviews about employee (must be documented in writing)

8. Exceeds expectation of the company senior management

7. Exceeds expectation of Product Owner and Tech Team

6. Exceeds reviewer’s expectations

5. Meets reviewer’s expectations / no-opinion

4. Does not meet reviewer’s expectations

3. Does not meet expectation of Product Owner and Tech Team

2. Does not meet of the company senior management

1. Customers are complaining about employee

0. Employee work is externally criticized by members of the technology community (e.g. PC Week)

Under this system, the manager can give a 4, 5, or 6. Any other rating requires outside input from the development team, the engineering group, senior management, customers, or the press.

Key Individual Performance Questions

The following questions can vary slightly from team to team. The manager rates the employee on a set of questions that drives the review process away from a standard list of items accomplished. These items are used to justify responses to the questions. The questions are designed to focus the performance review on the issues that are critical to company success and growth. They lead the discussion away from the Manager’s personal opinions about the person, and focus the discussion on what business impact this person has.

Feedback for a line Employee

  • Individual Contribution to Product Delivery: How effectively did this person produce deliverables required to bring product to the company or department? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter
  • Individual Contribution to Process Improvement: How fast did this person learn and implement new technologies and processes required for producing better product, shorter time to deliver a finished product, which is live in production for the customer’s immediate use and lower costs? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter
  • Individual Contribution to Organizational Flexibility: How flexible and adaptable was this person to changes in processes, organization, or personnel required to deliver products in Internet time frames? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter
  • Individual Contribution to Group Learning: How well did this person transfer learning in the development team? Can their work easily be supported when this person is absent? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter

  • Individual Contribution to the Product: How good was the product that this person brought to the client/department/company? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter

Feedback for a manager

  • Individual Contribution to Product Delivery: How well did this manager influence the product/project/team to be customer (internal and external) focused? How effectively did this manager’s team produce deliverables required to bring a finished product to the customer or company? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter

  • Individual Contribution to Team building: How good was this manager at selecting A players, coaching and redeploying B/C players? Are teams under this manager empowered, self-organized, inspired and accountable? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter

  • Individual Contribution to Enterprise Collaboration: How effectively did this manager (and by extension his/her team) collaborate with other managers (and teams) on cross functional / team issues? Can he/she listen to other point of views, negotiate and be sensitive to others and aware of office culture? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter

  • Individual Contribution to Process Improvement: How much did this manager influence (not dictate) and implement new technologies and processes required for producing better product, shorter time to market, and lower costs? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter

  • Individual Contribution to Group Learning: How well did this manager transfer learning in the development team? Can their work easily be supported when this person is absent? 20%
    • Past quarter feedback
    • Areas of growth next quarter

Overall Rating:


Career Goals:

What does this person passionately want to do?

The overriding objective of managers should be to identify what the person really wants to do and align job objectives accordingly. If this is not possible, the person should be encouraged and coached to find opportunities that will unleash energy and creativity. Super-performance teams can only be built with people who are passionate about their work. The greatest challenge of a manager is to creatively align the inner driving force of an individual with the corporate objectives required for success in the marketplace.

Training Needed:

What training is needed to move toward career goals?

Goals for next rating period (3 months):

Posted in Jeff Sutherland, Management, Mary Poppendieck, Quotes, Team Performance | Tagged: , , , | 3 Comments »

Signs of a high performing team

Posted by Christophe on December 23, 2007

I’m often asked how to measure the performance of a team. People want usually to hear a list of metrics. I instead point them to 6 principles that, when demonstrated, are strong signs of a high performing team:

  • a high service level and availability of their product/system
  • a high throughput of effective change
  • a low amount of unplanned work
  • a culture of change management
  • a culture of continual improvement
  • a culture of root-cause analysis

Building specific metrics around those principles shouldn’t be hard. They would just need to support those principles and not go against them.

Posted in Metrics, Team Performance | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

 
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