How to Build Your Teams as Communities of Practice

Raw Text

April 24, 2023

Leadership

By Dave West

Follow @davidjwest

Many organizations, in their pandemic-driven rush to use more digital tools, have begun leaning more heavily on agile approaches. Agile approaches such as Scrum have become mainstream for knowledge workers in marketing, human resources and manufacturing. Agile relies on the idea that cross-functional, self-managed teams focusing on a problem will better deal with uncertainty than traditional, industrial approaches. Building cross-functional or other teams with all the right skills to get the job done is often challenging. In organizations with a standard skill-based human resource model, switching to an agile focus can cause issues such as:

Needing generalists rather than specialists. Over the last 100 years, organizations have striven to build efficient, machine-like organizations with highly leveraged and efficient specialists. Project managers and processes bring together those specialists. Digital work, which requires teams to deal with uncertainty and rapidly changing understanding, challenges traditional management processes. Agile teams require team members who can turn their hand to anything necessary to deliver value.

Skill hoarding. Career development is often based on skills and service. This can lead to a culture of skill hoarding and encourages people to do the same thing they’ve always done rather than attempt something new.

Flattening organizations leaves a promotion gap. In traditional organizations, promotion is often connected to managing people, which  encourages organizations to build very deep hierarchies. Agile organizations tend to be less deep, which creates challenges when looking at promotion and career development.

No one has any time to help. When organizations are focused on efficiency and encourage everyone to fill their schedules with multiple meetings and be “involved” in multiple projects, there is little time to help others. That time is often at the expense of their “real” work.

So how do you build an organization that encourages focused delivery of value while providing an environment of support and development?

Related Article: Don’t Let Middle Managers Block Agile Transformation

The Famous Spotify Model

Much has been written — both positive and negative — about how Spotify organized as it grew. But leaving aside the commentary, the essence of Spotify’s approach can provide a blueprint for building a sustainable, effective, agile organization. The model's heart is decoupling work management from people or skill management. In Spotify’s case, you work in a squad as part of a tribe focused on the business domain, but you can also be part of a guild and chapter. Guilds and chapters provided skills and professional development support the tribe members needed.

Everything Changes, but Remains the Same

At some level, the Spotify model sounds much like any traditional organization, with department members allocated to a project team. Team members are allocated based on skills needed by the projects. And for effective project companies, there might be some parallels. The primary differences with this approach are:

Teams are long-lived. To build a stronger affinity to the problem, to customers and to each other, product teams are long-lived. Team members do not dip in and out of the team based on the skills needed. This differs from a practitioner involved in multiple teams when their skills are required.

Skill-based communities have both power and prestige. Being part of a skills group is vital to everyone's job. That means that organizations invest time and money in supporting this community.

Incentives are aligned with the model. Incentives such as promotions and bonuses are designed to reinforce the behavior of the new model rather than to reward existing business practices.

Skills-Based Communities Take Center Stage

Though forming teams around problems and outcomes can be challenging, it’s still much easier than investing in developing a skills-based community. Historically, communities of practice are created to keep employees happy rather than to provide clear business value. Skills-based communities become more critical with the introduction and focus on building strong, agile teams. Skills-based communities provide:

Learning Opportunities

ON DEMAND Collaboration in a Distributed Workplace: Tools and Techniques of Top Performing Teams Watch Now

ON DEMAND Improve Knowledge Sharing: The Key to Employee Productivity Streamline team collaboration and engagement Watch Now

ON DEMAND How McDonald’s Drove Productivity Through an Elevated Employee Experience In the new remote/hybrid workplace, work/life boundaries are blurred and workplace stress is a top driver of mental health needs. Watch Now

ON DEMAND How to Future-Proof Your Employee Experience Strategy in 2023 A framework to navigate through economic uncertainty Watch Now

ON DEMAND Challenges to Efficiency in 2023: Your Employees Need the Digital Workplace of the Future The era of asking employees to do more with less is upon us Watch Now

ON DEMAND The Essential Role of Communicators in Fostering Wellbeing in the Digital Workplace Join us for practical insights on how digital communicators can support employees to thrive in the digital workplace Watch Now

ON DEMAND Addressing Employee Needs and Wants with a Digital Workplace The workplace is getting more and more digital – both in how we work and where we work Watch Now

ON DEMAND Maintaining a Human-Centered Approach During Digital Transformation When it comes to digital transformation - people drive change, not technology Watch Now

ON DEMAND The Evolution of Employee Recognition Leveraging the power of appreciation to improve the employee experience Watch Now

ON DEMAND Are You Blocking Your Internal Comms Team Without Knowing It Best practices & tips to help IC teams thrive Watch Now

ON DEMAND Cyber Resilience In The Cloud Is Not Optional In today’s age of ransomware and widespread cyber attacks, your cloud data needs to be protected. Watch Now

View All

Promotion and status opportunities. Following the age-old saying, “Ask me not what I have done today, but who have I helped today,” skills-based communities provide opportunities for teammates to demonstrate their skills and receive rewards by helping others. People are paid to do their job within their team but are promoted and rewarded for their contributions to others.

Skills-based professional development resources. Skills-based communities provide learning assets and training opportunities to support team members' professional development. The leadership of this community will build strategic learning plans connected to skill families and roadmaps.

Mentoring and coaching programs. The community's responsibility is to provide time and infrastructure to effectively support coaching and mentoring within the organization. Sometimes this means helping people find time to mentor others when balancing the immediate needs of the business.

Talent acquisition and development. Bringing new people into the organization and managing an internal talent pipeline is the responsibility of this community. This requires dedicated people, a budget, and support from HR professionals and partners.

Related Article: 10 Ways to Create a Culture of Agile Innovation

Agile Adoption Is the Way to Go

As organizations wrestle with the complexity of doing business in the digital age, people remain more valuable than ever before. But success requires more than hiring the right people, having a great working environment and paying people well.

Organizations have to invest focus, leadership and, yes, money in the skills-based communities that surround their teams. But those costs are significantly lower than the cost of skills gaps, high attrition rates, and unhappy teammates. Introducing a skills-based community is complex, so it’s best to take an incremental approach. The first steps include:

Determine what success would look like in a realistic timeframe. What is the goal of building a community? What does “good” look like? These are some of the questions to ask before you start. By understanding your goal it is possible to build the right team and incrementally make progress toward that goal.

Build a team. Not only should this team include people from the delivery teams, but also HR and learning & development professionals. Including enough skills in the team is essential to start building and rolling out this approach. Include people from the groups that would find this approach most challenging.

Start small and aim for incremental progress. Don’t try to do everything in one big bang. Instead, start introducing changes gradually and incrementally. Focus on a skill area that is people-constrained first, such as security, design or data, and help teams that need that scarce skill.

Measure success and failure. Every organization is different, so ideas that seem logical or have worked in other contexts might not work in your situation. Keeping the goal in mind and reporting progress against it is essential. If something doesn’t work, try other things and empower the team to be excited by learning.

The digital age is complex and ever-changing. Building teams aligned with business outcomes, clustered around the customer with the right skills to deliver value, is the most effective way to manage the chaos. To be successful long term, though, those teams need a supporting people-centric, skills-oriented environment. By challenging traditional professional development approaches and doubling down on the idea of a professional community, modern organizations can develop people effectively.

Learn how you can join our contributor community.

About the Author

Dave West is the CEO at Scrum.org . He is a frequent keynote at major industry conferences and is a widely published author of articles and research reports, along with his acclaimed book: “Head First Object-Oriented Analysis and Design,” that helped define new software modeling and application development processes. Connect with Dave West:

Tags

leadership

skills

agile

scrum

teams

digital workplace

communities of practice

Featured Research

Buyer's Guide Learning Experience Platform (LXP) Market Guide (2021) Everything you need to know about the LXP marketplace Read Now

Research Report The State of the Digital Workplace 1,000+ executives offer a compelling snapshot of where we are and where we’re going Read Now

eBook Top 4 “As a Service” Considerations Connect hybrid workplace teams Read Now

Research Report The Not-So-Common Commonsense of Psychologically Safe Teams Invest in the right solution providers and technology Read Now

White Paper What Separates Good Teams from Exceptional Ones? It's How They Learn Read Now

Research Report Workplace Mental Health Trends Report The Future of Work Read Now

Guide Preventive Guide to Reducing Health Risks
 and Costs for Employers Healthy
 Minds at Work Read Now

Guide A Manager's Guide to Mental Health Literacy An actionable toolkit for strengthening employees' mental well-being Read Now

View all research

Related Stories

Leadership Your Managers Are Trying to Lead Hybrid Teams. They Need More Support

Leadership Mastering the Art of 21st Century Leadership: 13 Skills to Lead With Confidence

Leadership Embrace Disruption: Leadership Lessons from Shutterstock’s Pivot Toward AI

Smarter Experiences Win — Learn from Today's Leaders

Single Line Text

April 24, 2023. Leadership. By Dave West. Follow @davidjwest. Many organizations, in their pandemic-driven rush to use more digital tools, have begun leaning more heavily on agile approaches. Agile approaches such as Scrum have become mainstream for knowledge workers in marketing, human resources and manufacturing. Agile relies on the idea that cross-functional, self-managed teams focusing on a problem will better deal with uncertainty than traditional, industrial approaches. Building cross-functional or other teams with all the right skills to get the job done is often challenging. In organizations with a standard skill-based human resource model, switching to an agile focus can cause issues such as: Needing generalists rather than specialists. Over the last 100 years, organizations have striven to build efficient, machine-like organizations with highly leveraged and efficient specialists. Project managers and processes bring together those specialists. Digital work, which requires teams to deal with uncertainty and rapidly changing understanding, challenges traditional management processes. Agile teams require team members who can turn their hand to anything necessary to deliver value. Skill hoarding. Career development is often based on skills and service. This can lead to a culture of skill hoarding and encourages people to do the same thing they’ve always done rather than attempt something new. Flattening organizations leaves a promotion gap. In traditional organizations, promotion is often connected to managing people, which  encourages organizations to build very deep hierarchies. Agile organizations tend to be less deep, which creates challenges when looking at promotion and career development. No one has any time to help. When organizations are focused on efficiency and encourage everyone to fill their schedules with multiple meetings and be “involved” in multiple projects, there is little time to help others. That time is often at the expense of their “real” work. So how do you build an organization that encourages focused delivery of value while providing an environment of support and development? Related Article: Don’t Let Middle Managers Block Agile Transformation. The Famous Spotify Model. Much has been written — both positive and negative — about how Spotify organized as it grew. But leaving aside the commentary, the essence of Spotify’s approach can provide a blueprint for building a sustainable, effective, agile organization. The model's heart is decoupling work management from people or skill management. In Spotify’s case, you work in a squad as part of a tribe focused on the business domain, but you can also be part of a guild and chapter. Guilds and chapters provided skills and professional development support the tribe members needed. Everything Changes, but Remains the Same. At some level, the Spotify model sounds much like any traditional organization, with department members allocated to a project team. Team members are allocated based on skills needed by the projects. And for effective project companies, there might be some parallels. The primary differences with this approach are: Teams are long-lived. To build a stronger affinity to the problem, to customers and to each other, product teams are long-lived. Team members do not dip in and out of the team based on the skills needed. This differs from a practitioner involved in multiple teams when their skills are required. Skill-based communities have both power and prestige. Being part of a skills group is vital to everyone's job. That means that organizations invest time and money in supporting this community. Incentives are aligned with the model. Incentives such as promotions and bonuses are designed to reinforce the behavior of the new model rather than to reward existing business practices. Skills-Based Communities Take Center Stage. Though forming teams around problems and outcomes can be challenging, it’s still much easier than investing in developing a skills-based community. Historically, communities of practice are created to keep employees happy rather than to provide clear business value. Skills-based communities become more critical with the introduction and focus on building strong, agile teams. Skills-based communities provide: Learning Opportunities. ON DEMAND Collaboration in a Distributed Workplace: Tools and Techniques of Top Performing Teams Watch Now. ON DEMAND Improve Knowledge Sharing: The Key to Employee Productivity Streamline team collaboration and engagement Watch Now. ON DEMAND How McDonald’s Drove Productivity Through an Elevated Employee Experience In the new remote/hybrid workplace, work/life boundaries are blurred and workplace stress is a top driver of mental health needs. Watch Now. ON DEMAND How to Future-Proof Your Employee Experience Strategy in 2023 A framework to navigate through economic uncertainty Watch Now. ON DEMAND Challenges to Efficiency in 2023: Your Employees Need the Digital Workplace of the Future The era of asking employees to do more with less is upon us Watch Now. ON DEMAND The Essential Role of Communicators in Fostering Wellbeing in the Digital Workplace Join us for practical insights on how digital communicators can support employees to thrive in the digital workplace Watch Now. ON DEMAND Addressing Employee Needs and Wants with a Digital Workplace The workplace is getting more and more digital – both in how we work and where we work Watch Now. ON DEMAND Maintaining a Human-Centered Approach During Digital Transformation When it comes to digital transformation - people drive change, not technology Watch Now. ON DEMAND The Evolution of Employee Recognition Leveraging the power of appreciation to improve the employee experience Watch Now. ON DEMAND Are You Blocking Your Internal Comms Team Without Knowing It Best practices & tips to help IC teams thrive Watch Now. ON DEMAND Cyber Resilience In The Cloud Is Not Optional In today’s age of ransomware and widespread cyber attacks, your cloud data needs to be protected. Watch Now. View All. Promotion and status opportunities. Following the age-old saying, “Ask me not what I have done today, but who have I helped today,” skills-based communities provide opportunities for teammates to demonstrate their skills and receive rewards by helping others. People are paid to do their job within their team but are promoted and rewarded for their contributions to others. Skills-based professional development resources. Skills-based communities provide learning assets and training opportunities to support team members' professional development. The leadership of this community will build strategic learning plans connected to skill families and roadmaps. Mentoring and coaching programs. The community's responsibility is to provide time and infrastructure to effectively support coaching and mentoring within the organization. Sometimes this means helping people find time to mentor others when balancing the immediate needs of the business. Talent acquisition and development. Bringing new people into the organization and managing an internal talent pipeline is the responsibility of this community. This requires dedicated people, a budget, and support from HR professionals and partners. Related Article: 10 Ways to Create a Culture of Agile Innovation. Agile Adoption Is the Way to Go. As organizations wrestle with the complexity of doing business in the digital age, people remain more valuable than ever before. But success requires more than hiring the right people, having a great working environment and paying people well. Organizations have to invest focus, leadership and, yes, money in the skills-based communities that surround their teams. But those costs are significantly lower than the cost of skills gaps, high attrition rates, and unhappy teammates. Introducing a skills-based community is complex, so it’s best to take an incremental approach. The first steps include: Determine what success would look like in a realistic timeframe. What is the goal of building a community? What does “good” look like? These are some of the questions to ask before you start. By understanding your goal it is possible to build the right team and incrementally make progress toward that goal. Build a team. Not only should this team include people from the delivery teams, but also HR and learning & development professionals. Including enough skills in the team is essential to start building and rolling out this approach. Include people from the groups that would find this approach most challenging. Start small and aim for incremental progress. Don’t try to do everything in one big bang. Instead, start introducing changes gradually and incrementally. Focus on a skill area that is people-constrained first, such as security, design or data, and help teams that need that scarce skill. Measure success and failure. Every organization is different, so ideas that seem logical or have worked in other contexts might not work in your situation. Keeping the goal in mind and reporting progress against it is essential. If something doesn’t work, try other things and empower the team to be excited by learning. The digital age is complex and ever-changing. Building teams aligned with business outcomes, clustered around the customer with the right skills to deliver value, is the most effective way to manage the chaos. To be successful long term, though, those teams need a supporting people-centric, skills-oriented environment. By challenging traditional professional development approaches and doubling down on the idea of a professional community, modern organizations can develop people effectively. Learn how you can join our contributor community. About the Author. Dave West is the CEO at Scrum.org . He is a frequent keynote at major industry conferences and is a widely published author of articles and research reports, along with his acclaimed book: “Head First Object-Oriented Analysis and Design,” that helped define new software modeling and application development processes. Connect with Dave West: Tags. leadership. skills. agile. scrum. teams. digital workplace. communities of practice. Featured Research. Buyer's Guide Learning Experience Platform (LXP) Market Guide (2021) Everything you need to know about the LXP marketplace Read Now. Research Report The State of the Digital Workplace 1,000+ executives offer a compelling snapshot of where we are and where we’re going Read Now. eBook Top 4 “As a Service” Considerations Connect hybrid workplace teams Read Now. Research Report The Not-So-Common Commonsense of Psychologically Safe Teams Invest in the right solution providers and technology Read Now. White Paper What Separates Good Teams from Exceptional Ones? It's How They Learn Read Now. Research Report Workplace Mental Health Trends Report The Future of Work Read Now. Guide Preventive Guide to Reducing Health Risks
 and Costs for Employers Healthy
 Minds at Work Read Now. Guide A Manager's Guide to Mental Health Literacy An actionable toolkit for strengthening employees' mental well-being Read Now. View all research. Related Stories. Leadership Your Managers Are Trying to Lead Hybrid Teams. They Need More Support. Leadership Mastering the Art of 21st Century Leadership: 13 Skills to Lead With Confidence. Leadership Embrace Disruption: Leadership Lessons from Shutterstock’s Pivot Toward AI. Smarter Experiences Win — Learn from Today's Leaders.