Book Image

Enterprise Agility

By : Sunil Mundra
Book Image

Enterprise Agility

By: Sunil Mundra

Overview of this book

The biggest challenge enterprises face today is dealing with fast-paced change in all spheres of business. Enterprise Agility shows how an enterprise can address this challenge head on and thrive in the dynamic environment. Avoiding the mechanistic construction of existing enterprises that focus on predictability and certainty, Enterprise Agility delivers practical advice for responding and adapting to the scale and accelerating pace of disruptive change in the business environment. Agility is a fundamental shift in thinking about how enterprises work to effectively deal with disruptive changes in the business environment. The core belief underlying agility is that enterprises are open and living systems. These living systems, also known as complex adaptive systems (CAS), are ideally suited to deal with change very effectively. Agility is to enterprises what health is to humans. There are some foundational principles that can be broadly applied, but the definition of healthy is very specific to each individual. Enterprise Agility takes a similar approach with regard to agility: it suggests foundational practices to improve the overall health of the body—culture, mindset, and leadership—and the health of its various organs: people, process, governance, structure, technology, and customers. The book also suggests a practical framework to create a plan to enhance agility.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Enterprise Agility
About Packt
Forewords
Endorsements
Contributors
Preface
Other Books You May Enjoy
Index

Behaviors aligned to agility


Before delving into interventions for changing behaviors, it is important to examine patterns of behavior which align with agility and therefore help in enhancing it.

Treat failure as a learning opportunity

Despite best intentions and efforts, delivered outcomes may fail to meet expectations or even turn out to be adverse. There can be varied reasons for this, including making incorrect assumptions, a change in circumstances leading to assumptions being invalidated, human errors, and unanticipated circumstances.

Knowledge work, that is, work which is creative and not mechanical or repetitive, particularly work done with the objective of being innovative, is experimental in nature, and by definition is liable for failure. People and teams are consciously cognizant of this fact, and hence treat failure as an experience to be learned from rather than treating it as an event that is to be forgotten after blaming someone as the cause of it. The individual will retrospect...