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

Scaled Agile Marketing using SAFe – The Essentials

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

Focusing on SAFe™

In the previous article in the Scaled Agile Marketing series, I provided an overview of how Scaled Agile Marketing looks like. This time around I want to provide some more details on one of the approaches I mentioned for implementing Scaled Agile Marketing – the Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe™).

Why SAFe? First of all, it is the most popular scaling approach these days and so many marketers will find themselves in organizations where SAFe is actually used in IT/Technology and the option of using it in Marketing as well will come up. As a result of that, it is also the scaling framework I’ve actually had a chance to use in a marketing context with good results.

Let’s make sure we cover the SAFe Essentials

SAFe has several configurations that can range from the “Essential” configuration through “Portfolio” and “Large Solution” configurations all the way to “Full SAFe” which includes all configurations together. In this article, I will start with the “Essential” configuration and mention “Portfolio” towards the end. The “Essential” configuration isn’t just a version of SAFe it is also a set of 10 essential elements without which you might be scaling agile but you aren’t really using SAFe to do it.

I actually covered some of the essential elements in the previous article:

  • #1 Lean/Agile Principles
  • #2 Real Agile Teams And Trains (In the “The Agile Marketing Team of Teams” section)
  • #3 Cadence and Synchronization
  • #4 PI Planning (covered in the “The Agile Marketing Team of Teams” section as well)
  • #7 Inspect and Adapt (Learn at the System Level)
  • #10 Lean-Agile Leadership

So let’s look at the remaining essential elements:

  • #5 – DevOps and Releasability
  • #6 – System Demo
  • #8 – IP Iteration
  • #9 – Architectural Runway

#5 – DevOps and Releasability -> MarOps and Releasability

This is essential that requires slight tweaking for a Marketing context: SAFe Agile Marketing organizations aim to break down silos between marketers and marketing technology (MarTech) and operations. Each Agile Marketing Train should be able to continuously run marketing experiments or deliver new marketing plays/campaigns to the live customer/buyer journey. Over time, the separation between marketing and marketing tech/ops is significantly reduced and marketing trains operate with an automated continuous delivery pipeline that includes easy instrumentation and measurement to enable continuous experimentation and validation of hypothesis.

#6 – System Demo

When we defined Agile Marketing we talked about some of the key things we value –  “Validated Learning”, “Customer Discovery”, and “Adaptive Campaigns” among others. One value that isn’t explicitly mentioned in the Agile Marketing manifesto but is implicitly required to achieve these is “Working Marketing” meaning objective observation of working marketing deliverables rather than lengthy comprehensive documentation/designs/plans. I used to tell agile development teams that unless they’re the Microsoft PowerPoint development team their demos shouldn’t be running PowerPoint. In a marketing context, I cannot say that anymore because sometimes a PowerPoint deck IS the marketing deliverable but you get my drift.

We should frequently look at real marketing deliverables so we can discover whether they really drive the customer journey experience we are looking for as well as get a real feeling as to progress towards our goal. In a scaled context where we have multiple marketing teams working on a larger customer journey or marketing campaign, it’s crucial to frequently integrate the whole marketing story using real deliverables, get some feedback on it, and adjust course if necessary. This is the intent of the System Demo in SAFe. Every two weeks, the full system – the integrated work of all teams on the marketing train for that iteration – is demoed to the train’s stakeholders. Stakeholders provide the feedback the train needs to stay on course and take corrective action. In a marketing context, we probably need a better name for this. Any suggestions?

#8 – IP Iteration

The Innovation and Planning iteration occurs every Program Increment (8-12 weeks typically). Since we don’t plan specific content for the IP iteration it can act as an estimating buffer for to help meet your PI objectives. In addition, it provides dedicated time for innovation, continuing education,  PI planning, and Inspect and Adapting events.

#9 – Architectural Runway

In product development, Architectural Runway refers to side work that needs to happen to support in order to support the fast and clean implementation of high-priority near-term features. In a marketing context, it refers to marketing technology/infrastructure that needs to be in place to support upcoming high-priority marketing plays/campaigns/activities (think for example a lead nurturing solution in case we plan to do lead nurturing in the next PI), exploration/research, and maybe some key architectural components like a page template or a slide deck template or brand guidelines that reduce the amount of effort when getting to work on actual marketing plays.

Essential SAFe works pretty well in a Marketing context, with some limitations

As you can see applying the 10 essential SAFe elements to a marketing context isn’t too hard. There are some modifications but at this high level, the mapping works. This doesn’t mean that Agile Development is Agile Marketing. What it does mean though is that once you have a good team-level agile marketing process/structure, there’s good applicable guidance for how to scale it. This is exactly what we’ve seen in CA Technologies when we applied SAFe to a marketing context. Our main challenge was and is changing leadership mindset, especially around decentralized control and organizing around customer focus and de-emphasizing the marketing specialties/silos as well as driving a  real learning/experimentation mindset and process at all levels.

When it comes to leveraging SAFe the main challenge we had is that SAFe was designed for a product development context and therefore the materials and knowledge base which are one of SAFe’s biggest advantages weren’t a good fit for us. We actually started to use one of the SAFe’s workshops to train the teams but realized midway that there’s too much development language and examples so until we create either a more neutral version of SAFe or a marketing-focused variant, the best we can do is leverage the practices without relying on the great materials. It was also apparent that marketers prefer lighter-weight methodologies/frameworks and mainly didn’t have the patience to learn about SAFe in depth. The essential elements were all that could fit their attention span.

This combination of incompatibility of the materials and the distaste for formal lengthy training and a large set of practices also meant that when it came to SAFe expertise it was crucial to have people around that don’t just recite the SAFe gospel but also have a deep understanding of the principles and are able to adapt SAFe to other contexts without killing its spirit.

This is of course true for scaling agile marketing in general, regardless of whether you’re using SAFe, LeSS, or any other approach. You’ll be working in exploration mode trying to identify the right language, process, and structure. In most cases, marketing people will give you limited attention. Make sure you have somebody that can support you in that mode rather than just teach you a methodology.

There’s one thing I would always add to Essential SAFe

Yes, I know, the thinking is to keep it to bare essentials, and 10 elements is better than 11, but there’s one key concept and practice that is part of SAFe, is portrayed in the Essential SAFe big picture above, but isn’t mentioned as a key element here. It is also one of my favorite focus areas. Enough clues for now. I’ll let you try to figure that one out until the next article which will focus on this topic…

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

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