At the end of 2020, studies published by Deloitte, Forbes, and Gartner all concluded that 2021 was going to be the year of Agile marketing.
By publishing their results, they contributed to making Agile marketing an even more powerful buzzword than it was before. The problem is, powerful buzzwords tend to breed powerful misconceptions.
The misconceptions around what Agile marketing really is and how it's applied have now plopped this particular buzzword right smack in the middle of a popular -- and heated -- debate within the Agile community: Kanban vs Scrum for Agile implementation.
While many of the previous skirmishes in this ongoing battle have hinged on the right approach for software development, the question we want to tackle here is which framework is right for marketers to use when applying the Agile methodology?
An overwhelming amount of software-centered blogs, media, and forums on the first page of your Google Search results will side with Scrum all the way.
But, for marketers, Scrum isn't the only road to agility.
It's up to us all to look beyond the buzzword and sift through what's hype and what's actionable, so we can actually get ourselves on the road to becoming more resilient, effective, and efficient.
That's why, in this article, we take a no frills approach to Scrum, Kanban, and Scrumban and how you can go about deciding which one is the right Agile framework to apply inside your marketing team. We even offer up a look at Rimarketing, a new framework developed just for Agile marketers.
When teams begin their Agile journeys, they often start out with making a steadfast choice about which framework they're going to apply going forward into their transformation.
Making such an important decision at the moment of maximum ignorance is often the reason why some Agile transformations lose their momentum in the long-run.
In fact, there's prework you can do within your core team that will help you establish a strong foundation for your choice of framework and allow you to make an informed decision at the right moment.
Rally your team around the marketing roadmap for the coming year and discuss the projects that are coming down the pipeline for your team. The type of work you do, how it moves through the team, and its stakeholders are often definitive factors in any team's decision about whether Kanban, Scrum, and/or Scrumban are right for you.
Your choice of framework will influence your internal team as well as how you interact with your stakeholders; consider them during this crucial moment of discovery as you take your next steps towards the summit of marketing agility.
Use historical data as well as upcoming work to determine how many of your tasks relate back to strategic initiatives linked to business objectives, and how many of your tasks require you to respond quickly to ad hoc requests.
Defining this existing,"implicit" order of operations will help you differentiate between projects you can anticipate with a finite scope and those that require you to be responsive.
This is one of the points at which our opinions entirely converge with those of the software-development centered blogs and forums.
For the marketing function, there is not just one single right framework for applying the Agile methodology. Half of marketers practice Scrum and Kanban in their pure forms, while the other half are seeking ways to adapt the two frameworks to form their unique hybrid. And it's only natural!
As Scrum originated in software development and Kanban was developed in the factories of Toyota, neither of these Agile frameworks was specifically built to suit all marketers everywhere.
Depending on the type of marketing work you do with your team, there's a case for practicing pure Scrum, pure Kanban or a hybrid framework that includes practices from both.
If you're currently shopping for an Agile framework, here's what to keep mind as you're getting to know your options and linking their benefits to process challenges you're seeing in your own marketing work.
Scrum is an Agile framework for developing and delivering complex projects with an emphasis on software development, but already popular in sales and marketing teams as well.
To understand how Scrum will work for your marketing team, you should start with learning about the elements of this framework. The Scrum framework is made up of roles, artifacts (things), and ceremonies (meetings) that help teams implement Agile and allows the values and principles of the methodology to come to life.
Scrum creates focus on high priority work by encouraging the team to apply time boxes, also referred to as sprints, during which they actively execute from only a subset of the backlog. Each sprint lasts a certain fixed period (e.g. two, three, or four weeks, depending on the team’s preferences) and is defined by high-velocity, productive work.
Before each sprint, the team gets together to determine what subset of work from the backlog will be on focus for the next period of active work. For a sprint to be considered successful, the team needs to have completed the subset of the general backlog they committed to before productive work began.
Roles in Scrum are not vertical because they don't represent hierarchy; rather, cover different aspects of the Agile implementation. The Scrum Master is the process owner who makes sure the framework is being implemented correctly. The Product Owner in the marketing context is usually the Team Lead/Marketing Manager, as this is the person providing the business requirements and context to the wider execution team. In many resource-strapped Agile marketing teams, the Product Owner often acts as the Scrum Master as well as a team lead.
Here's a quick roles breakdown:
Scrum teams implement a strict schedule of meetings to create a routine and minimize the need for other meetings, which often take up too much of the team's productive time. Scrum events each focus on a specific purpose related to the sprint timebox itself.
Sprint
The sprint is the time for which the team will deliver the agreed X amount of tasks. It usually lasts between two and four weeks and its duration cannot be changed once it's begun.
Sprint Planning
Before the beginning of the sprint, the team gathers to discuss which subset of high priority items from their backlog will be the focus of their upcoming period of active work. They turn projects into tasks, volunteer for work, and ensure the items they've chosen are fully vetted and ready for their attention.
Daily ScrumThe daily scrum (or daily standup) brings the team together every day during the sprint to discuss progress of the tasks on the scrum board and address any blockers, issues, or delays.
Sprint Review
Once the timebox of execution has concluded, the team hosts a stakeholder review meeting to show and tell their completed work from during the sprint. Instead of hosting individual stakeholder updates, the review is a great forum to bring all relevant stakeholders together and update them en masse.
Sprint Retrospective
The team retrospective usually takes place after each sprint review and focuses on key takeaways that will act as drivers for positive change in the process of the team. No stakeholders are invited. Team only. Period.
Artifacts in Scrum are designed to improve visibility and opportunities for improvement within the team. They provide key information so that everybody has the same understanding of what's happening within the team.
If you answer more than three of these questions with a YES, then your best shot might be starting off with SCRUM!
The Kanban method for knowledge work, as formulated by David J. Anderson, consists of four basic principles and six core practices. The Kanban principles encourage teams to start slowly and layer on Kanban practices into their process gradually:
1) Start with what you do now
2) Agree to pursue incremental change
3) Respect the current process, roles, and responsibilities
4) Encourage acts of leadership
The Kanban core practices provide a simple, clear framework for promoting visibility and managing the workflow in a way that is inclusive to all team members:
1) Visualize the workflow
The main element of Kanban is the Kanban board, which helps teams to visualize workflow, discover bottlenecks in their process, and analyze efficiency and capacity.
2) Limit WIP (work in progress)
Work in progress limits encourage the team to avoid multitasking and start finishing the work items them begin working on. By reducing context switching, applying work in progress limits allows you to finish tasks faster and proceed with the next ones in the pipeline at a healthy pace.
3) Manage flow
Kanban is focused on shifting the focus from managing the people to managing the work. This helps avoid keeping teams busy all the time and fosters understanding of how we get work through the system faster to deliver to the customer early and often.
4) Make process and policies explicit
This practice refers to the Kanban process and policies that are agreed upon by team members. Making them explicit helps everyone stay on the same page regarding what's expected. As the team evolves, these policies may be revised to reflect the current situation.
5) Implement feedback loops
Also known as Kanban cadences, feedback loops are the means of driving continuous improvement on existing processes.
6) Improve collaboratively
Kanban focuses on Kaizen (continuous improvement) by encouraging the team to consistently evolve current process with the aim to eliminate wasteful activities and improve the value stream.
This Agile framework fits the the marketing team process because marketing work tends to be ongoing and recurring.
For example, there are monthly newsletters, weekly content updates, daily social media management, and so on. In some cases, it may prove to be lacking for teams that work on a project basis, because they often need the more prescriptive and time boxed approach of Scrum to deliver complex projects on time.
If your answer to more than three questions is YES, you should consider going for KANBAN!
Scrumban mixes practices from Kanban and Scrum into a single solution for team looking for a more customizable framework.
The result is a unique combination of the Scrum ceremonies like Sprint Planning, Stand Ups, and Retrospectives, and the Kanban pull technique and WIP limits. Thus, it's driven by a pre-established schedule and customer demand at the same time.
Unlike pure Scrum, Scrumban doesn't focus on cross-functional teams. Rather, it embraces specialized roles within the team, which can sometimes present a more suitable way to handle diverse marketing skill sets. It embraces Kaizen and ditches the rigid schedule of meetings that often take up a large chunk of a Scrum team's productive time.
If you answer more than three of these questions with yes, SCRUMBAN is a hybrid framework worth exploring!
Over years of working with marketing teams to implement Agile ways of working, our co-founder Andrea Fryrear struggled to find just the right combination of Agile practices. To ease this struggle for other marketers, she developed the Rimarketing framework.
Built on the idea that marketers often move from one kind of work to another, Rimarketing allows teams to shift from a flow-based, Kanban-style activity into iterations (sprints) and back again as needed.
Here's Andrea to explain:
Choosing the right Agile framework is a tough call for any team. Luckily, it is not a one-time choice.
Most teams either start with a more prescriptive model, like Scrum, to build healthy habits for the rest of their Agile journey or start with their current process and layer on more Agile practices as Kanban suggests.
In most cases, as marketing teams mature in their Agile implementations, they end up somewhere on the spectrum between the two frameworks, crafting their own unique hybrid that serves their purposes effectively.
As you discover more about what your team needs in terms of process, you may feel that you've outgrown a certain framework and opt to explore another one. It’s all about starting off on the right foot with Agile so you can build an even stronger Scrum, Kanban, Scrumban, or Rimarketing team!