Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.

Practice Makes…

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

Finding true success with your SAFe implementation

We all believe that practice makes perfect.  However, if you practice the wrong things the only thing you are perfecting is the wrong approach.

A big part of my personal life revolves around motorcycles, specifically road racing and coaching.  When I am working with new racers or track riders wanting to improve their skills the first thing I do is to ask them to complete this sentence “Practice makes…”  Almost everyone says “Perfect!”, but usually the opposite is true.  When racers go out on track and continue to repeat bad habits, such as not moving their eyes down a track or using poor body position, they simply cement in the wrong technique, which makes it more difficult to correct later.  I always teach the riders to focus on learning the basics and then build on these good techniques until they become “permanent”. I want to thank Nick Ienatsch from the Yamaha Champions Riding School for helping me to see the importance of learning the right skills before starting to practice.  Working with Nick and the crew at YCRS and ChampSchool taught me so much about the importance of getting the basics right.

Switching sports metaphors, a favorite phrase from football coaches (Marv Levy may have been the first to use this) is to ‘learn how to do it right, and then practice it until you never get it wrong.  That’s how we bake in the right techniques, and where Practice Makes Permanent is our ally.

When implementing SAFe® it’s common to bring in old habits from your organization’s history.  It’s hard to break free of these past practices, but it’s even more difficult to change these once brought into the transformation effort.  There are many common anti-patterns that are practiced and made permanent, such as:

  • Multiple backlogs (whether real or virtual), make it difficult for the teams or ART to focus on the most important thing to work on and damages lean flow due to the context switching.
  • Leadership believes that their job is to direct work, which is in direct opposition to SAFe Principles 8 (Unlock Intrinsic Motivation) and 9 (Decentralize Decision Making).
  • Not using the IP Iteration for its vital purpose of not only being a capacity buffer but supporting ongoing innovation, improvement, and synchronized planning.
  • Using PI Planning as a ‘readout’ of assigned plans, rather than allowing the teams to discover the best plan to meet business needs.

A common issue that we see is when organizations treat SAFe as a buffet where you can pick and choose what you implement and what you don’t.  While SAFe is highly configurable and is not at all prescriptive, there are key elements that must be implemented for real success.  These 10 Critical Success Factors are the basic components that you learn, and then practice until you never get it wrong.

The 10 critical success factors of Essential SAFe – ©Scaled Agile, Inc.

This does not mean that you have to be perfect to start.  Learning to implement SAFe correctly is just like learning to ride both fast and safely.  You learn the proper techniques and continue to inspect and adapt until you get it right, then start to actually practice until it becomes instinctive.  That’s when the speed comes.  With SAFe, learn the 10 Critical Success Factors of SAFe and then practice them until they become instinctive.  You will make mistakes along the way, and getting these factors right takes time and effort.  But if you continue to focus on these basics they become part of the culture and the norm for your organization.

That’s when the true value of a SAFe implementation is experienced.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

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