From Chaos to Agile, and the demons along the way by Seemin Suleri

Automatic Summary

Transitioning From Chaos to a Nimble, Agile World: An Exploration of The Transformation Journey at Two HH Group

Today, we will go on a journey— a journey into the heart of organisational transformation from absolute chaos into a nimble, agile world, one that we embarked upon at the Two HH Group. My name is Su Su, I was the head of Engineering and now am the head of project delivery. I hope that some of the insights I share will resonate with you, and perhaps inspire you to implement similar changes within your own organizations.

A Glimpse into the History of Two HH Group

Two HH Group, a parent company for various businesses divisions dealing with wide-ranging fields such as collectibles and babysitting services, embarked on its own technological journey about three to four decades ago. Recognising the limitations of manual, paper-based management, the company sought automation, building its first automated system in Cobalt. This system served as the foundation of the company's warehouse, invoicing, marketing, and customer management sectors, setting the stage for the future integration of online services.

The Online Takeover

Just over a decade later, the company decided it was time to move towards online territory. This decision emerged from the realisation that most of their customer base was shifting online. Thus, a new objective was established: to create a web presence for the company. Offline and online systems were made to run side by side. The transformation was successful with nearly 70% of their customer base shifting to the online businesses.

The Challenges of Digital Transformation

Fast-forward to roughly three to four years ago, the company stood at the cusp of another significant change - a digital transformation. Our main question was, “How can we innovate and stay ahead with a system rooted in Cobalt legacy?” The magnitude of this task led to my recruitment and the starting point of my challenge to transform the existing systems.

Where do you start in chaos?

  • Analyzing the system status and understanding the issues at hand was crucial. This was accomplished through conversations with team members, examining the systems, and understanding the organizational culture.
  • Recognising the chaos and taking responsibility for it was a game-changer. Working with the mindset that the chaos was my responsibility allowed me to initiate real change.
  • Though doubt and the impostor syndrome may occasionally creep in, embracing uncertainty, and using that energy was pivotal towards moving forward.

The Power of People in Agile Transformation

As the transformation journey unfolded, we quickly realized that the heart of any success lies within the people. Listening to team members, providing them with developmental opportunities, involving them in decision-making processes, and recognizing their value in the organization proved to be vital. Agile practices came in handy here, emphasizing that teams should be autonomous and equipped to organize themselves around the tasks assigned to them.

Creating a psychologically safe environment where team members can voice their opinions with confidence, and feel heard and acknowledged was particularly emphasized in the transformation process.

Moreover, effective leadership that functions more as a servant to the team rather than a traditional authoritative figure is another key aspect of Agile transformation. Leaders should foresee challenges, clear the path for their team, and ensure smooth functioning, all while being open to making mistakes and continuously learning from them.

Leadership's Role: Paving the Path for Transformation

Leaders are more than just decision-makers; they are role models, mentors, and most importantly, problem solvers for their teams. But this often means a new role, new expectations, and a new way of adding value to the organization. As such, leaders must be comfortable in their journey, withstand self-doubt, trust in their unique path, and embrace any feeling of unease or emotion.

Choosing Love As A Motivator

Overcome doubts, self-blame and the sense of being overwhelmed by utilizing love as a driving factor. Love for the team, work, product, and organization can transform challenges into adventurous undertakings. Two HH Group’s story of transformation is a testament to this approach. Our throughput and velocity have seen a tenfold and eightfold increase respectively, employee engagement and retention are at an all-time high, and, most importantly, we have an incredibly passionate team.

By sharing this narrative, my hope is to inspire others to face their challenges head-on, seek opportunities for growth and change, and successfully undertake their journey towards transformation.

Thank you for joining me on this journey through the transformation of Two HH Group. Whether you're facing similar challenges, or already in the midst of your own transformation journey, I hope these insights and reflections will provide some food for thought as you plan your next steps.


Video Transcription

Hello, I am Su su and I am the head of project delivery. It used to be and head of engineering for a company called Two HH Group.Um And today, I'm hoping to tell you a little bit of a story um of the journey um of how we move from an absolute chaos into a much nimble and agile world. Um And the idea is that I hope that some of it resonates with some of you and you might be able to take a few um ideas from our journey and maybe implement it in your own world and hopefully it will help you in overcoming some of your challenges as it helped us overcome some of ours.

So here's the a little bit of an effort to, to achieve that. So before we start off on, on anything regarding that journey, um one of the first thing is to kind of make you understand a little bit of the history of why or how we started on this journey in the first place. So 28, a group is a holding company for a number of business divisions and it deals with businesses like collectibles or coin stamps, painting, stuff like that. Um And also there is a, a another side business which is about babysitting, uh which links parents to babysitters and, and stuff like that, but kind of a diverse uh portfolio of companies under that group. Um So the company is 75 years old. So uh going back about 30 to 35 years ago, the company thought, well, you know, we're doing everything on paper. So I think the best thing is to um to kind of move towards a more um more automated automated system. So they built their first automated system, um accounting system in coal. So that did really well for the for the company and they decided to automate more things into Cobalt.

So they took the warehouse system, the invoicing system, the marketing system, the customer management and the like, you know, it all went into this amazing new Cobalt system back in the day. And so that did the company really well. Um fast forward to um just over a decade ago, they decided that, you know, we have a largely offline customer base, but now online is the thing. So we're going to move towards that direction. So they wanted to move towards that side and decided to um hire a small team that builds a kind of a web presence for them. And the idea was they're going to build all these um different brands and the websites for these brands that will integrate through the databases into the Cobalt system. So that both systems would run side by side eight years on from that point it did the company really well.

Um most of their customer, customer base, uh 70/70 percent moved to the online businesses and that kind of was a turning point for the business now. Um They wanted to move. So three, about three years ago, 34 years ago, they wanted to move towards this digital transformation.

So they wanted to innovate, they wanted to be the best in the market, they want to be ahead of the competition. But how do you do that with the system that is built around Cobalt legacy? So that was the big challenge. Um So that was the point at which they kind of hired me and brought me into the teens. And my biggest challenge was to go in and look at the systems and bring forward this systems transformation journey into the, into, into fruition. So it was the idea of bringing um newer technologies and, and, and, and taking the, taking the company into the future, um the company systems into the future. And so the moment I stepped in, um the, the first thing I would say is, is you, you are faced with a lot of a lot of uh massive tasks. Um The first thing is to analyze where you are, where the company actually um is what is the status of things So when I started looking in, um some of the things I did was to have conversations with the team members who have absolutely everyone involved um in the team and having conversations with people looking at the systems, looking at uh what was there, looking at, what wasn't there.

And what I discovered was that this opportunity um that was provided to them in a very start up culture. In the beginning when they were building these web systems had kind of resulted into really massive chaos. The team had grown from that small size building web systems into a much bigger team, but they hadn't kept control over the quality of things. There was the version control wasn't there for the core of the application logic, which meant you didn't know whether the systems on live or any different from systems on test and where things were and the people were all over the place they were moving, the projects weren't delivering and there was just everything a bit chaotic.

So in that, where do you start? It can become increasingly overwhelming. And I know that a lot of us either are in that situation or will be in some point in our lives. Um You step in and you find out this mammoth task and, and, and so where is the beginning of all of that um out of the process to even even move forward? So the first thing I would say is when your demon attacks you and tells you that this is too chaotic and you can't even start the process. I would recommend that you own the chaos. And by that, I mean, you step into this wild world where you do not really understand what it is all about. But you say, regardless of whether you started the chaos, whether you were responsible for where things are or not today, you are here, which means it's not a result of your direct actions, but you are responsible. Today. The day we start thinking that this chaos is ours. It is our responsibility is the day we start any real change. So overcoming the demon that tells you it's someone else's fault that the systems are so bad that you can't see your way unless you immerse yourself in the chaos and say I own it from today.

And it is my responsibility. You cannot move forward. At least that's what I found. And I think that in that moment, um most of us sometimes feel that the task is too big and whether we have everything it takes to make the next move, whether we have the skills or, or whether we are good enough. And you know, I think that women face it a lot more than others. Um And we know that imposter syndrome kicks in and you feel the stress of, of thinking that perhaps you are not good enough for it. And I would say when that demon comes across your way. You have to use that energy that it produces to your advantage. Um I would encourage you to watch Kelly mcgonigal's TED talk on how to make stress your friend. And in that she talks about how physiologically our bodies produce the same sort of reaction to when we are stressed and when we are really excited, it's about thinking about stress. So the, the next thing I did on my journey is to energize myself in the uncertainty and really feel that there is a big task ahead of me and I am standing in front of it, but I am standing there with my arms open and welcoming this uncertainty and feeling the excitement in order to move forward.

So I think that is, is, is is another thing that kind of helped in that journey towards, towards building the teams. Now coming back to the story, I was telling you about to a age group. So I took on the responsibility and I said from today, the chaos is mine and I'm going to, to energize myself and then be driven by this energy that I feel and this, this excitement I feel within myself. Um One of the things I would say, a great disservice that um that the the the management of this whole team had done is that they had forgotten about the main core of any successful project. The reason why a lot of the teams fail to deliver is not because of terrible processes or, um, or, you know, or, or infrastructure, let's say it's largely because of people. One of the main things they had done is they did not listen to the people. And when I say that, I think, um that is to me the core principle that agile sits around as well. When I went in and I spoke to every single person in the team, I realized that they were not given any kind of goals for development and training. They did not have any opportunity to voice their opinions. They had no control over the work that was assigned to them.

They had no control over anything, any decisions that were made in the direction that they were going, everything was passed down from various levels of management on to these people who were building these systems, not knowing why they were doing the work they were doing. So they were just trying to do within the domain of their control, the best job they knew how and that focused my attention towards the people people. Um And I feel that, you know, agile emphasis on, right, regardless of which framework or methodology within agile, you decide to use, it focuses heavily on the people. And when I say that what I mean is you need to make sure that your teams are autonomous. If they are given a task, they need to be able to organize themselves around the work that is assigned to them. In our case, the teams decided to split themselves into smaller, smaller sets, which means we had a large team working on a project. But within that, we had sub teams of 4 to 5, very small, which meant that you had a 1 to 1 interaction with your team lead, who understood you, who also understands what your motivations are, what your frustrations are. What are your dreams and aspiration, what sort of training and development you would like? So all of those things come into play.

We also made sure that people are feeling psychologically safe, which means that when they are able to disagree with you, and it means anybody head of engineering or tech lead or anybody, their opinion is heard they're listened to and they are responsible for giving us the feedback in their weekly one to ones or in their fortnightly retrospectives and whatever they say, we take actions based on that.

So they feel a part of the whole machine. And what happens after that is that when people give the feedback and they know you're listening to them, then they get more engaged because they know that you are focusing your attention where it needs to be. And one of those things that we found with other, with, with, with kind of what was happening before is that people would give their feedback and it would be just a check box exercise and nothing would happen eventually to the point where they just thought that it's just pointless to have any retrospective or any meetings because nothing happens off the back of that.

As leaders, we need to, we need to um and we need to demonstrate by our action that when something is raised, we are able to take action on it and take it seriously listening, truly listening to understand and, and changing things in order to improve. And some other things around people is that when we hire people, and I think that um recruitment is a major part of it when we are hiring people and they're becoming a part of the team. And also when they're leaving us in both on both sides of it, we, we welcome them with open arms and when we say goodbye to them, we, we make sure that it is a great goodbye and a thank you and acknowledgement for the service and hard work they've done. We are all human beings at the end of the day and we all deserve that attention. And that is, is a true game changer when it comes to creating a true cultural shift. The al the other thing I would also like to emphasize is that the role of leadership changes as we evolve. And in agile, it's all about servant leadership. And so for leaders, they need to become the oil that keeps the machine going. And traditionally, a lot of the leadership, uh a lot of the leaders in, in um in software teams have um have been promoted from software engineering positions, which means that they feel that now they don't have any value add, their main value add was development and it has been taken away from them.

But the idea is that you are the one who solves the problem for your team, even ahead of time, foresees it and clears the path so that the team goes through without a hurdle. And that is where you add your true value. So as leader, be comfortable in the journey and not being bothered by this demon. And you know, it might be a daily struggle for some and I know that people struggle with this a lot, but that oil is extremely important to keep all of the cogs going. And while you're doing that, you need to also make, allow yourself to, to make mistakes. You need to allow the and and be comfortable in the knowledge that you are making your own path. You might have a lot of inspiration, you might have some idols in the field, but you need to be the leader that resonates and do the things that resonate with you. And I would always recommend reading a lot to take inspiration again, but do what you think is the right thing for you and your team and listen to your team and create that environment. Um And, and I would say that that has been a really great source for me because where I had self doubt in my own ability, I knew that I was making my own path and doubt was a part of it.

So I learned to sit with it and therefore, and, and accept it in order to make my own path. Um, another thing is, is like as women, we sometimes get blame for being too emotional. And I've heard that, uh, and it, and it is amusing. However, I'd say that even if it's any emotion, stress or, or you know, um anger frustration or excitement or any of those things, you need to know that it is OK to feel that it is OK. It is a part of you. Um And, and, and take it all in and feel it and observe it and live with it that that is really powerful and do it for love, the love of your team, the love of the people around you, the love of the people you work for the love of the product. And I think that when you are energized and fueled by something as pure as love, the result is great. So in our little story from being completely chaotic to now working exceptionally well in terms of throughput and velocity, we are 10 times and eight times higher than what we used to be respectively. We are hitting all of our milestones. Our engagement, employee engagement is is and retention is, is, is all times high and everybody is engaged and they're having fun and we have an extremely engaged team.

So I hope in my little way, I have been able to um give you a little bit of a glimpse of the journey and perhaps given you some ideas for how you might be able to make a few changes or inspiration in yours. Thank you very much.