The People Mechanism
When we refer to the people mechanism as it relates to the Isosceles Agility Triangle™, we are speaking broadly about all things culture-related, including values, mindset, and behaviors. Leaning into the people mechanism is perhaps the most challenging maneuver to execute, but it also has the greatest potential to drive value and evolutionary growth. Think of it this way: every organization is a collection of people, and everything those people do should be driving customer value, which ultimately drives business agility and long-term organizational success. It follows then, that for any company looking to achieve results, supporting people should be the top priority.
In an organization with a healthy people mechanism, people are aligned around shared values, focused on the customer, and motivated by purposeful work. They prioritize effectiveness (doing what is most likely to help the company achieve its goals) over efficiency, even though being effective may be more challenging. People throughout the organization have the foundational knowledge they need to work autonomously, make informed decisions, and generate new ideas. They take calculated risks, and if those risks do not pay off as expected, it is a safe place for them to struggle, fail, and learn.
Perhaps the most important hallmark of a healthy people mechanism—especially when working holistically with healthy practice and technology mechanisms—is the pragmatic acceptance of change. Change is a constant, and when it happens, an organization must be able to integrate it into its culture, address it in its practices, and account for it in its technology. The ability to do this is the underpinning of resiliency and longevity, and organizations that can achieve this will still be thriving in 10 to 20 years. It is an unfortunate truth, however, that not everyone is able or willing to adapt to change, and there will be people who choose to leave an organization rather than embrace it.
Leadership and a Purposeful Focus on Culture
A healthy people mechanism starts with leadership. We specifically use the term leadership, versus management, for this reason: leadership is expansive and effectiveness-focused, while management is typically prescriptive, hierarchical, and efficiency-focused. Historically speaking, the focus of work has been on driving efficiency by managing risk and reducing variability—it was central to Henry Ford’s advancement of the assembly line model. Healthy management practices have their place, and efficiency is important, but leadership and calculated risks are what drive evolutionary change and innovation.
For an organization to have a healthy people mechanism, leadership must take a proactive and purposeful approach to developing the culture they want. Culture isn’t just what actions and behaviors you embrace. It’s everything else that you allow to happen. Not speaking up when you see something is tantamount to endorsing it. For example, by not addressing micromanagement, it becomes an inherent part of the culture.
The complexity of bringing a healthy culture to life cannot be understated. Of all the things leadership must do, one of the most important is to prioritize customer value, ensuring it is always top of mind and informs both decisions and behaviors. In practice, this might look like shifting how leadership holds teams accountable: moving from accountability for hitting forecasts to accountability for delivering customer value.
It also entails establishing the desired cultural characteristics, codifying them, and modeling them. While every organization will need to define the culture that best supports its people in their efforts to drive customer value, in our practice at Isos Technology, we have found several core behaviors that leadership can model to help drive success. These include moving from a top-down decision-making model to a decentralized model for decisions that are made frequently and are not strategic in nature, establishing a learning culture in which coaching is supported and embraced at every level, and cultivating safe and healthy practices around giving and receiving feedback.
- Decentralized decision-making: In many cases, becoming more agile, resilient, and self-reliant means moving from a hierarchical and authoritative decision-making model to one of empowerment, but it is important to understand then this is appropriate. Strategic decisions, with long-ranging impact, tied to the course of direction of the company, should be centralized, but most other decisions can be delegated to the team or person with the domain expertise to make it.
- A learning culture: Being agile, resilient, and self-reliant means being able to adapt to change on an ongoing basis. To do that, organizations must embrace continuous learning. Not only do companies need to fund and support ongoing coaching and training for
all employees, and members of the leadership team also need to actively participate in it, both for their own development and to lead by example.
- Giving and receiving feedback: Agility, resiliency, and self-reliance all require continuous improvement, and feedback loops are an important part of that. Organizations that want to create a culture in which it is safe to give and accept feedback must again lead by
example. One of the best ways to get feedback is to start asking for it, acknowledge it when it’s given, and respond to it when appropriate, in order to close the feedback loop.
While we’ve covered these three concepts briefly here, we explore them in depth in our companion whitepaper, Leading Through Change: the C-Suite’s Role in Enterprise Agile Transformation.
Practices and technology are both critical to supporting people, and it is leadership’s responsibility to enable this to happen. For example, for an organization to be able to lean into people to solve an issue, they need to be able to have open, ongoing, and blame-free conversations around it. While the ability to speak candidly about problems is culture-related, regular practices like taking actions on the improvements suggested in retrospective meetings support it. Technology, for its part, provides people with a means for collaboration and transparency, and creates shared understanding.
A Common People Pitfall: Maintaining Outdated Practices that Reinforce Old Behaviors
While a purposeful approach to culture modeled by leadership is a great way to start, to truly drive change, desired behaviors must cascade throughout every corner of the organization. A common pitfall that we encounter in our consulting practice at Isos is leaving in place outdated practices, processes, and even the more tactical, human resources-focused procedures that inadvertently reinforce outdated, undesirable behaviors. While, in this whitepaper, we tend to focus more on the practices related to how work gets done, organizations are best served by taking a beginning-to-end approach, starting with the hiring process, all the way through the way employees are evaluated, compensated, and given bonuses when goals are reached.
It is important that organizations begin hiring people who have the necessary mindset to help the company prioritize value. Further, roles must be structured and job requisitions must be rewritten, goals must be revised, and compensation and incentives must be reframed in support of outcomes vs. outputs.
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