Entrepreneurial Operating System® / Traction®- How does it relate to Agile/Scrum?

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

I’m hearing from more and more companies that are using the Entrepreneurial Operating System® (EOS®) and are also looking at or practicing Agile e.g. using Scrum. In discussions with these companies two key questions surface time after time:

  • My teams want to use Agile/Scrum – is that aligned with the fact that we’re using EOS® in the organization?
  • My teams use Agile/Scrum, can we use EOS®? 

The short answer is that Agile and specifically Scrum and EOS®are mostly complementary. 

EOS®, as well as Agile approaches, emphasize focus, alignment, a disciplined approach with structured events, artifacts, and policies that attempt to limit the amount of work in process (WIP) in a systematic way, and create better flow with cadence. 

So what’s one big thing that’s different about Agile/Scrum in comparison to EOS®? Transparency and Empiricism

Transparency is emphasized in both but is used differently. Both approaches make the work transparent. Agile frameworks like Scrum are designed to deal with VUCA  (Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, Ambiguity) through empiricism – an aspect which EOS®isn’t explicitly solving for. And in this environment Transparency goes much further – it is not just awareness of what the team and individuals on the team are working on – it is the transparency of whether the product of the team’s work (whether the team is building a product or leading a company) is working and effective. 

Scrum can help teams:

  • align towards the Vision – making the Vision or a specific sub-aspect of it their “Product Goal” (even if they’re not a Product team – it’s the overarching goal for the product of their work – be it winning deals, operating the company, growing, etc. ) 
  • plan and deliver on their Rocks and achieve Traction®- by using Product Backlogs, Sprints, and potentially concepts like “Program Increments” from SAFe which align very well with the EOS®Quarter. 
  • EOS® Big Rocks can map almost 1:1 to PI Objectives. For teams, We recommend having them at the team level and not an individual contributor in order to drive collaborative collective ownership towards results. When scaling across the organization each team/function does have its own list of PI Objectives/Big Rocks like in EOS, as well as an organization-wide list of Big Rocks / PI Objectives. 
  • SAFe PI Planning or other types of Big Room Planning could complement EOS®Quarterly planning by involving the actual Teams and not just the function leads in the planning and accountability cycle. 
  • Issues are very similar to Risks and how they’re managed in SAFe via ongoing ROAMing (Resolving, Owning, Accepting, Mitigating)
  • Scrum Sprints map to the Weekly Level 10 cycle. Sprint Review/Retrospective/Planning is an opportunity to inspect and adapt where we are within the quarter, which is especially important in VUCA We’re not just executing a quarterly plan. We’re intentionally learning what works/doesn’t and adjusting course accordingly. 

Another opportunity is to use Scrum at the leadership level – as a way to apply more empiricism to complement EOS®discipline. 

  • All of the above could be used by the leadership team itself. 
  • The “Product Backlog” is focused on the “product” of the leadership team’s work – which is leading the company – solving issues, growing, implementing strategies/tactics, etc. Changes in Process, People, Dealing with Issues, Advancing Rocks. 
  • The Increment of each Sprint is not just a “Done / Not Done” answer to to-do items – it’s an actual “working change” in how the company operates. (For example – list of candidates for a VP position, draft scorecard, analysis of desired profitability range, etc. ) This Increment is ready for the leadership team to inspect, review, with the goal of adapting their plans (Product Backlog) accordingly each and every Sprint/Week. A leadership team could also decide to run longer Sprints e.g. Monthly and use a weekly cycle similar to Scrum’s “Daily Scrum” to inspect and adapt progress within the Sprint. The Sprint length should match the level of VUCA the leadership team/company is facing. 
  • Leadership Team acts as the “Developers” of the “Product”
  • The PO/SM Scrum roles could map several ways –
    • Option 1
      • Visionary – Product Owner
      • Integrator – Scrum Master
    • Option 2
      • Visionary and Integrator™- Sharing the Product Owner role
      • Dedicated coach/Scrum expert as the Scrum Master

Similar to how EOS®starts at the top, Organizations NOT using Scrum yet could use Scrum to complement EOS® at the top level and then expand from there into the various teams. 

This would follow the guidelines/mapping described above. In this scenario, a solid Scrum Training/Coaching would be provided to the leadership team in advance of the whole organization and they would become Scrum Practitioners better able to understand as well as drive what’s going on when Scrum/EOS®gets implemented throughout the organization. 

For teams in an organization using EOS®…

If you’re starting to use Scrum in an organization using EOS®or if you’re using Scrum and your organization is in the process of implementing EOS®the list of mappings above will help you create some common language and reduce the conflict/confusion that might arise due to running both EOS®and Scrum at the same time. 

Real/Imaginary conflicts between Scrum and EOS®

Is EOS®Waterfall? 

The main aspect of EOS®that looks waterfallish is the fact that it runs a quarterly cycle with planning the Rocks for the quarter in advance. I don’t consider that waterfall. And if care is given to making sure that Rocks focus on WHAT rather than HOW and leave enough space to account for variability/learning, I don’t see a problem. It’s very similar to SAFe’s PI-level planning, which is again properly done with an eye towards emerging learning and adjusting course as needed while staying focused on the high-level objectives for the quarter. 

How about individual accountability in EOS®- isn’t that in conflict with Scrum’s “Collective Ownership” approach? Isn’t EOS®in the way of Teamwork? 

Indeed this is a potential area of conflict. But even EOS®makes several mentions of the fact that in order to succeed team members need to prioritize the team’s rocks over their individual ones and support each other. When implementing EOS®there should be an emphasis on accountability towards team rocks rather than individual rocks, even at the leadership team level. 

Isn’t EOS® Micro-management under a thin veil? 

The way to look at this is that EOS®allows teams to micro-manage their work – with the understanding that in a VUCA environment there’ll be lots of surprises and emerging realities that are better addressed quickly. The Integrator role, like the Scrum Master, should lead the team through this discipline of tight-loop inspection and adaptation, rather than feel a need to micromanage work or output. Learning the proper “Leaders who Serve” Scrum Master mindset would be very useful to any EOS leader if he wants to avoid EOS becoming a checklist-based micro-management tool. 

 

Conclusion

As you can see above, as long as you understand the purpose and practices of EOS®, Agile, and Scrum, and are thinking about how they can complement each other, you can definitely use them in tandem. If you want some help in thinking through what this would mean in your context, we’ll be happy to discuss it further.

 

Credits to Erez Tatcher, AgileSparks CEO who participated in the thinking and writing of this article.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

Release Train Engineer
Agile Project Management
Manage Budget Creation
ScrumMaster Tales
Jira admin
Agile Delivery
Agile Contracts Best Practices
Retrospectives
Slides
speed @ scale
Agile and DevOps Journey
System Integration Environments
Scrum Primer
Change Management
Continuous Delivery
Scrum
Risk Management in Kanban
SAFe Release Planning
Continuous Deployment
Story Slicing
Risk-aware Product Development
Limiting Work in Progress
PI Planning
Covid19
RTE
The Agile Coach
Agile Program
RTE Role
Principles of Lean-Agile Leadership
Jira Cloud
User stories
ART Success
Iterative Incremental Development
Acceptance Test-Driven Development
Lean Agile Leadership
Artificial Intelligence
Nexus
BDD
Sprint Planning
Agile Assembly Architecture
Nexus and Kanban
Jira Plans
Agile Games and Exercises
predictability
transformation
Enterprise DevOps
Agile Community
Team Flow
Agile Marketing
QA
Tools
DevOps
Code
ATDD vs. BDD
Scaled Agile Framework
Agile Basics
Tips
EOS®
Lean Agile
Agile Product Ownership
Agile for Embedded Systems
Managing Projects
Agile Development
Agile Israel Events
SPC
LeSS
Implementing SAFe
Planning
Frameworks
Lean-Agile Budgeting
Scrum Master
Atlaassian
A Kanban System for Software Engineering
speed at scale
Continuous Integration
Agile Outsourcing
Agile Israel
Games and Exercises
GanttBan
Applying Agile Methodology
chatgpt
Agile Project
Video
Kaizen
PI Objectives
Systems Thinking
Rovo
AgileSparks
SAFe
Certification
Scrum Master Role
Process Improvement
Nexus Integration Team
Self-organization
Lean Risk Management
Lean Budgeting
ARTs
ROI
Accelerate Value Delivery At Scale
Elastic Leadership
Nexus and SAFe
Effective Agile Retrospectives
Releases Using Lean
System Archetypes
Software Development Estimation
Agile Techniques
Operational Value Stream
Pomodoro Technique
Amdocs
The Kanban Method
Professional Scrum with Kanban
Agile
Lean and Agile Principles and Practices
Managing Risk on Agile Projects
Kanban Kickstart Example
Continuous Improvement
Lean Software Development
Agile Release Management
Webinar
Advanced Roadmaps
POPM
Scrum Guide
Scrum With Kanban
Development Value Streams
Agile Product Development
Presentation
Built-In Quality
What Is Kanban
Hybrid Work
Achieve Business Agility
Lean Agile Basics
Rapid RTC
AI
Keith Sawyer
AI Artificial Intelligence
Scrum.org
Kanban 101
Entrepreneurial Operating System®
Product Management
Lean and Agile Techniques
System Team
IT Operations
Lean Agile Organization
Agile Testing Practices
Agile Mindset
Confluence
Introduction to ATDD
Spotify
Agile Games
Agile India
Lean Startup
Test Driven Development
WIP
Scrum Values
ALM Tools
Agile Risk Management
An Appreciative Retrospective
SAFe DevOps
Legacy Enterprise
Value Streams
Coaching Agile Teams
Program Increment
Agile Release Planning
Risk Management on Agile Projects
Kanban Game
Certified SAFe
Kanban Basics
Jira
lean agile change management
Introduction to Test Driven Development
Lean-Agile Software Development
Sprint Iteration
Business Agility
TDD
Lean Agile Management
Continuous Planning
Professional Scrum Product Owner
Legacy Code
Portfolio for Jira
Agile in the Enterprise
Perfection Game
Engineering Practices
SA
Agile Exercises
Kanban
Implementation of Lean and Agile
Agility
Product Ownership
ATDD
Quality Assurance
Sprint Retrospectives
Atlassian
Nexus vs SAFe
LAB
Scrum and XP
Kaizen Workshop
Professional Scrum Master
Software Development
agileisrael
LPM
Daily Scrum
RSA
Reading List
Large Scale Scrum
AgileSparks
Logo
Enable registration in settings - general

Contact Us

Request for additional information and prices

AgileSparks Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter, and stay updated on the latest Agile news and events

This website uses Cookies to provide a better experience
Shopping cart