Async agile 1.0, is distributed agile 2.0!
This blog expands on the ideas from “The Async-First Playbook”. You can either browse through the posts using the grid below, or start at the very beginning. Alternatively, use the search bar below to find content across the site.
Busy people must collaborate differently
Well intentioned, busy people want to be collaborative. But they often end up as bottlenecks. I argue that busy people must change their model of collaboration.
The risk of async islands of excellence
In large organisations, it’s tough for a small team to cling to its own subculture for too long. It’s not impossible to have an ‘async island of excellence’! It’s just hard. I want to use this post to reflect on the challenges your async-first team could face. In the process, I want to explain why it makes sense for the entire company to eventually go async-first.
5 superstitions we can't hang on to any more
Senior leaders are often victims to blind spots and corporate superstition. And just like in real life, superstition hurts at work as well. So, let’s examine some common superstitions we all face at work, with a critical lens. By the end of this post, we’ll know which of them hold up to logical scrutiny.
Why you may find it tough to introduce asynchronous work in your team
The first port of call for any change journey is your immediate team. If your colleagues don’t commit to change, it’s unlikely that even in a conducive organisational culture, a shift will happen.
As an evangelist, coach, consultant and change maker, anticipating push back from your team will help you deal with it as well. So in this article, I’d like to share with you some blockers you’re likely to encounter from your colleagues and towards the end of this piece, we’ll consider some high-level approaches to address these blockers.
Why you may find it tough to introduce asynchronous work in your organisation
Introducing change in large organisations is tough. Synchronous work has a 250 year old legacy and organisations are used to it for a number of reasons. As an advocate of asynchronous work, you need to be aware of the potential challenges you’ll face when you try to introduce a new way of working in any organisation.
This article outlines some of the obstacles you should expect.