Imagine you’re all in on Agile marketing.
You know your current processes aren’t working. The team’s tired of those broken processes making everyone’s jobs unnecessarily difficult. They're undermining your success, and by extension, your company’s success. As someone who likes having a job, that isn’t good.
So, getting your team to go Agile should be easy, right? If the problems you’re facing are out in the open, and it’s clear that Agile can solve them, you'd assume everyone could move forward without hurdles.
Not so fast.
It turns out that getting people to change can be tough. Changing an entire team can be even tougher. But it can be done, and when the potential reward for doing so is producing better work (and feeling better about it, too), the effort is worthwhile.
The status quo is Agile marketing’s greatest enemy.
Even if your current processes have clear problems, that may not be enough to convince the team to make a change. When things have been done one way long enough, it’s easy to get comfortable with things as they are. Imagining how much better they could be can feel like a huge mental leap.
Chalk it up to a quirk in human psychology, but sometimes, we’d rather suffer than put in the work to improve our situation.
Fortunately, this also means that once your team builds better habits, Agile marketing becomes second nature. Here’s how to start the conversation that will put you on the path to success.
Marketers love numbers. Especially big numbers that quantify bold promises. After all, it’s not stereotypical marketing fluff if the data proves your position is correct.
In its 7th Annual State of Agile Marketing Report, AgileSherpas discovered the following about agile marketing:
Now, here’s a real kicker: additional research shows Agile marketers are 252% more likely to report success. That’s nothing to shake a stick at.
Collectively, these statistics tell you a few things:
That’s plenty of fodder to help build your case. And next, we’ll explore exactly how to do this.
Love the idea of Agile marketing but not sure where to begin? Our 3-step, jargon-free Quick Start Guide will have you up and running in no time.
Any new initiative will need a goal for the team to work toward. Without one, you’re liable to drift without direction, rendering your attempts to adopt agility ineffective.
Plus, goals are powerful motivators for teams. When you set a time-bound target to hit, you create urgency to achieve that outcome.
Here’s an example. Say a team wants to reduce time spent creating a single piece of content by 30%. They also want to do this within 90 days. This team now has:
Plus, that’s also an example of a goal Agile can help make happen.
Follow this process to do this yourself:
That third point is particularly important for making the first two work. People are more motivated by eliminating pain or avoiding loss than they are by achieving any specific positive outcome.
That sounds counterintuitive, but psychology tells us that’s how we operate.
To understand how that principle works, consider this scenario. You tell your team, “Hey, if we adopt Agile marketing, we can be 252% more successful!”
That’s awesome, but your team is going to need more motivation than that to act. That’s because lots of things make lots of promises to marketers. They need that kind of statistical proof, sure, but they also need to know what specific problems a solution will, well, solve.
Here are some ideas to frame the conversation in a way that highlights pain points being removed:
In each of these examples, instead of offering a benefit, you’re tying an outcome to a specific problem they won’t have to tolerate anymore. That’s a powerful combination for getting buy-in.
Now that everyone is starting to get on board, it’s time to put a plan into place.
However, Agile marketing is complex. It incorporates a number of phases, concepts, and tactics that make up its principles, values, and best practices.
That can make moving forward feel intimidating. If no one in your organization has heard of Agile before, they’ll probably feel overwhelmed. Even if they are familiar, they might still feel stressed about the idea of actually implementing it.
So, make it easy to take action.
For each step in implementing Agile marketing, give yourself a deadline to incorporate each piece. Those steps can be small and achievable, making them easy to implement, while still motivating the department to hit their goals.
The way to do this is to give the team clear steps on doing one small, specific thing at a time.
Then, once you’ve successfully implemented one thing, move onto the next logical step. Rinse and repeat long enough, and you’ll become an Agile marketing powerhouse before you know it.
What follows are a few ideas for pieces to get started with (this isn’t an exhaustive rundown of everything that a robust approach to Agile requires, but it’s enough to get started and see an impact without needing to wait too long for your efforts to bear fruit).
For example, one place you might start with Agile marketing is hosting daily standups (quick meetings to cover what you did today and yesterday, as well as any roadblocks preventing progress).
These are simple to set up, and their benefits can be experienced almost immediately.
Next, adding a basic Kanban board can be another easy step to move onto next. Since they help visualize work (and they’re immensely useful for running standups), they’re the next logical piece of the puzzle to put together.
Pairing standups with Kanban boards can be an awesome combo thanks to the following points:
Lastly, retrospectives (meetings held at the end of the week, or the end of a sprint) can be an effective third pillar in the early goings of implementing Agile.
Getting started is going to be a massive learning process, and using retros to highlight your wins, struggles, and areas to improve can be invaluable both for your actual work, and for putting Agile into practice itself.
Here’s a (somewhat) complex look at how Agile project management operates relative to traditional project management:
We aren’t necessarily ready to add every step just yet. But, this illustrates how the agile principle of continuous improvement works. At the end of a project, the retro offers an opportunity to discuss how things can be done better next time.
Building that habit right away can help ensure long-term success by developing a spirit of rapid iteration and learning by doing.
Succeeding in doing something new is satisfying. It quickly becomes addictive and drives people to seek out more opportunities to grow and improve.
This works in two different ways:
So, how do you harness each of these truths to turn small wins into compounding successes?
Start by developing a plan for how you’ll implement Agile, and then acting on that plan. Keep each step simple, and over time, you’ll comfortably work your way toward successful practices that become habit.
You’ll also avoid overwhelming your team with too much, too quickly, which can lead to frustration and burnout.
This isn’t a comprehensive guide to change management or Agile marketing.
But, you are now equipped with the knowledge you need to get started with both, beginning with the basics, and establishing a foundation for success with your team. Then, not only will you be convinced Agile is the way to go, but your entire team will too.
Here’s to a happier and more productive marketing future.