DZone
Thanks for visiting DZone today,
Edit Profile
  • Manage Email Subscriptions
  • How to Post to DZone
  • Article Submission Guidelines
Sign Out View Profile
  • Post an Article
  • Manage My Drafts
Over 2 million developers have joined DZone.
Log In / Join
Refcards Trend Reports Events Over 2 million developers have joined DZone. Join Today! Thanks for visiting DZone today,
Edit Profile Manage Email Subscriptions Moderation Admin Console How to Post to DZone Article Submission Guidelines
View Profile
Sign Out
Refcards
Trend Reports
Events
Zones
Culture and Methodologies Agile Career Development Methodologies Team Management
Data Engineering AI/ML Big Data Data Databases IoT
Software Design and Architecture Cloud Architecture Containers Integration Microservices Performance Security
Coding Frameworks Java JavaScript Languages Tools
Testing, Deployment, and Maintenance Deployment DevOps and CI/CD Maintenance Monitoring and Observability Testing, Tools, and Frameworks
Partner Zones AWS Cloud
by AWS Developer Relations
Culture and Methodologies
Agile Career Development Methodologies Team Management
Data Engineering
AI/ML Big Data Data Databases IoT
Software Design and Architecture
Cloud Architecture Containers Integration Microservices Performance Security
Coding
Frameworks Java JavaScript Languages Tools
Testing, Deployment, and Maintenance
Deployment DevOps and CI/CD Maintenance Monitoring and Observability Testing, Tools, and Frameworks
Partner Zones
AWS Cloud
by AWS Developer Relations
The Latest "Software Integration: The Intersection of APIs, Microservices, and Cloud-Based Systems" Trend Report
Get the report
  1. DZone
  2. Culture and Methodologies
  3. Agile
  4. Connecting the Dots: Business and Development

Connecting the Dots: Business and Development

By clearly defining goals and objectives for your entire team, you make every person feel invested in the overall product, putting your business on course for success.

Prabhu Arumugham user avatar by
Prabhu Arumugham
·
Sep. 18, 18 · Analysis
Like (3)
Save
Tweet
Share
5.04K Views

Join the DZone community and get the full member experience.

Join For Free

Crow's Nest

Before the creation of sophisticated marine systems, ships had to rely solely on the acutely keen eyesight of their seamen to steer them towards their destination. A group of seamen would be perched up on a tall post, also called the crow's nest, and provide direction to the ship's captain, who then relayed it to his crew at the bottom of the ship. This is very similar to how many enterprises function today. The business provides strategic vision and direction from the top, the Product Owner captains the team, and the team executes the activity assigned to them. Unfortunately, not many enterprises are as aligned as the seamen were and end up docked at the wrong port. The solution to this problem lies in formulating the Vision, Goal, Product Roadmap, and Initiatives for product development, so that all can steer in the same direction.

Vision: The Beacon

Just as a beacon serves to guide ships to their destination, a clear-cut vision helps all the stakeholders, including Product Owners, Scrum Masters, and Development teams capture the essence of the product and serves as a reference for constructing work items (Initiatives, Features, and Stories). Translating the vision to these work items is key to connecting strategy to execution. Product Vision Board by Roman Pichler is a good start that helps teams capture a vision for their product. Vision board serves to capture the following in detail:

  • Market segment and target user group
  • Needs that the product fulfils
  • USPs of the product
  • Business goals that the product should deliver

'Objective' Goals: Knots

Goals and metrics define a measurable future state. In large enterprises with multiple teams, strategic goals give direction to smaller programs, which can be sub-divided, in line with multiple levels of the organization. For example, a trading ship's objective would be to trade goods worth $1 million and visit 50 seaports. Speaking of metrics, the speed of ships those days were measured in knots! There are some popular frameworks, which help in defining and measuring goals. One such is Objective and Key Results (OKR). It serves to connect enterprise, team, and personal objectives in a hierarchical way to achieve measurable results, helping steer the ship in the right direction.

Key Benefits of Aligning Strategy With Execution

  • Improved Agility - Anticipate market trends and quickly respond
  • Development teams contribute to corporate vision - tightly coupled with organizational objectives
  • IT teams fluent in the business - they tend to contribute more if they understand the business importance

Identify Key Initiatives: Seaports

Once the vision is set and the goals are determined, the next step would be to identify key initiatives. Enterprise Agile framework SAFe ® defines the initiative as a large work item, which requires analysis and definition of a minimum viable product (MVP) prior to implementation. This implementation takes place over multiple iterations. The portfolio owner decides the constitution of teams that would be part of this initiative. The initiative is then broken down into various levels of work items and planned with different timelines for execution. This flow of work items and execution that is planned and charted out forms the product roadmap.

Rolling Out a Roadmap: Sea Map

Defining a product roadmap is of paramount importance:

  • to get all stakeholders on board and get the budget approved for the product
  • to provide a timeline view of the team's progress towards achieving their goals
  • to function as a valuable sales tool
"The world is changing very fast. Big will not beat small anymore. It will be fast beating the slow."

- Rupert Murdoch, Chairman of Fox News Channel

Just like a coordinated sea crew responds to calamities in the sea, a business strategy well aligned with product development anticipates market trends better and responds quickly to changing requirements. This helps enterprises stay in the fast lane and stay relevant. To see how small teams can scale their agile adoption enterprise-wide, read the article 'Five Powerful Enterprise Agile Frameworks'.

scrum agile

Published at DZone with permission of Prabhu Arumugham, DZone MVB. See the original article here.

Opinions expressed by DZone contributors are their own.

Popular on DZone

  • Distributed Tracing: A Full Guide
  • Top 5 Data Streaming Trends for 2023
  • Create a CLI Chatbot With the ChatGPT API and Node.js
  • Strategies for Kubernetes Cluster Administrators: Understanding Pod Scheduling

Comments

Partner Resources

X

ABOUT US

  • About DZone
  • Send feedback
  • Careers
  • Sitemap

ADVERTISE

  • Advertise with DZone

CONTRIBUTE ON DZONE

  • Article Submission Guidelines
  • Become a Contributor
  • Visit the Writers' Zone

LEGAL

  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

CONTACT US

  • 600 Park Offices Drive
  • Suite 300
  • Durham, NC 27709
  • support@dzone.com
  • +1 (919) 678-0300

Let's be friends: