Agile organizations does not value hire & fire culture.

Agile organizations does not value hire & fire culture.

I talked with the manager of a large institution, which undergoes an agile transformation for years already. I learned it is great to have so many contractors & temporary staff aboard because they can be easily fired in the crisis. 

Hearing such a statement tells me the organization still sees its people as just another resource. I call it the management via Excel sheet. How the managers can be so shortsighted? 

In the era of knowledge and creative economy, it is the talent and knowledge of the people who make the difference. Talent can flourish where there is a culture that supports it. It is difficult to recruit the right people. It takes a lot of time and energy to create an environment, where people can be engaged and motivated. Investments in their knowledge and skillsets are expensive. The knowledge accumulates around individuals and teams. The T-shape nature of their expertise prevents people from being interchangeable. 

After you spent so much time, effort, energy, and financial resources to create performing teams, will you still value the capability to fire someone irreversibly? I doubt. Your work with people and your approach to the knowledge-management strategically forms the pillars for your Agile organization.

What is your opinion?

#leadership #engagement #knowledgemanagement #culture

https://www.michalvallo.eu

Narendra Vemuri

Architecture, Data Migration, DevOps, Hybrid Cloud, automation, and people management.

4y

Agile (flat vs hierarchy )/excel = !

Like
Reply
Balázs Skorka

Principal Consultant - Dynamics 365 at Microsoft

4y

One of the challenges, I believe, is the difficulty to quantify the indirect cost being burnt as a result of the high turnover, and compare that with a steady staffing or a rather conservative growth model. Such hidden costs are not visible in the staffing costs. Training and retraining, resulting overtime of other employees, etc. So I agree, if you only look at the direct financials, you miss half of the truth. Still, this is a very common phenomena.

To view or add a comment, sign in

Insights from the community

Explore topics