Why Agile Fails — And How to Make It Stick
I have lived through this more than once. You walk into an organization, you can see clearly that Agile would make things better, and you hit a wall. Not a wall of bad intentions — most of the people involved are smart, experienced, and genuinely trying to deliver good work. The wall is something older and harder than that. It is culture. It is history. It is the accumulated weight of a command-and-control framework that has been built up over years, sometimes decades, and that has been working well enough that nobody with real power has had a reason to change it. And then you show up and tell them they should. Why Large Organizations Struggle The Agile Manifesto was written in 2001. But mainstream adoption — real adoption, not just putting "Agile" on a job description — did not come until much later. And even today, after more than twenty years, plenty of large organizations are still working through it. That is not laziness. It is complexity. Think about what it a...