Building, Operating, and Scaling AI-Enabled Solutions with SAFe

Building, Operating, and Scaling AI-Enabled Solutions with SAFe

SAFe Enterprises often encounter challenges integrating AI technology into their production solutions. Early adopters of AI have found ways to address the common barriers to building, operating, and scaling AI-enabled products.

When:

November 15, 2023, 10:00 am – November 15, 2023, 11:00 am MST

Where:

Zoom

Who:

Agile Coach, Product Manager, Product Owner, Program or Project Manager, Release Train Engineer, Scrum Master

Event Overview

This webinar will examine the impacts of AI solution development on people, processes, and technology, as well as the commitments SAFe organizations should be prepared to make for creating desirable, viable, feasible, and sustainable AI solutions.

• Identify the new roles needed in Agile teams and ARTs, and the upskilling needed across all SAFe roles.

• Understand the new processes that must be added to the product development lifecyle to support AI solutions.

• Explore the new classes of tools that form the architectural runway needed to support AI development.

Speakers

Marc Rix

Methodologist & SAFe Fellow at Scaled Agile, Inc.

Harry Koehnemann

Methodologist & SAFe Fellow at Scaled Agile, Inc.

Dr. Wiselin Mathuram

SPCT, Chief Transformation Officer at International Business Consultants, LLC

Jeff Shupack

SAFe Fellow, President of Advisory Practice at Project & Team, Inc.

Enterprise Adoption Patterns for AI in SAFe

Enterprise Adoption Patterns for AI in SAFe

SAFe 6.0 featured new guidance providing a basic introduction to Artificial Intelligence (AI) and how enterprises can improve their AI adoption using patterns in the Framework.

When:

November 8, 2023, 10:00 am – November 8, 2023, 11:00 am MST

Where:

Zoom

Who:

Agile Coach, Product Owner, Program or Project Manager, Release Train Engineer, Scrum Master

Event Overview

SAFe 6.0 featured new guidance providing a basic introduction to Artificial Intelligence (AI) and how enterprises can improve their AI adoption using patterns in the Framework. With the recent explosion of Chat GPT and Generative AI, new opportunities and challenges have emerged for organizations wanting to embrace this rapidly evolving technology. This webinar will examine the current state of AI and how SAFe is also evolving to provide new guidance for adopting AI safely and effectively.

• Understand how Chat GPT and the explosion of Generative AI has launched a new technological revolution.

• Explore the three new dimensions of AI guidance that will be added to the Framework in the weeks ahead.

• Learn about the insights gained from recent research on AI adoption by SAFe enterprises.

Speakers

Dr. Steven Mayner

VP Framework, Methodologist & SAFe Fellow at Scaled Agile, Inc.

SAFe® Enterprise Insider – November 2023

SAFe® Enterprise Insider

Each month we cover important news and updates coming exclusively to SAFe® Enterprise Members.

When:

November 2, 2023, 9:00 am – November 2, 2023, 10:00 am

Where:

Zoom

Who:

Agile Coach, SAFe Program Consultant, SAFe® Release Train Engineer

Event Overview

In our November Enterprise Insider call, we will cover important news and updates coming to you, including:

  • Special Edition – November Launch Recap and Enablement
  • Agile HR Explorer recap
  • CoFund Enablement
  • Piplanning.io Q&A
  • Realizing portfolio outcomes with Real Options

Speakers

Deema Dajani

SAFe Fellow and Product Manager at Scaled Agile, Inc.

Joe Vallone

Principal Consultant, SPCT/SAFe Fellow at Scaled Agile, Inc.

SAFe® Enterprise Insider

SAFe® Enterprise Insider

Join us for this month’s Enterprise Insider call, where we cover important news and updates exclusive to SAFe® Enterprises.

When:

September 6, 2023, 9:00 pm – September 6, 2023, 10:00 am MST

Where:

Zoom

Who:

Agile Coach, Release Train Engineer, SAFe Program Consultant

Event Overview

In our September Enterprise Insider call, we will cover important news and updates coming to you, including:

Customer story highlights from the Summit

Globalization approach and roadmap

Meet Beth Bock, VP of Enterprise Business & Product Segment

Finding your way on SAFe Studio

Measuring flow call for research

Speakers

Mike Clarkin

Chief Marketing Officer

Scaled Agile

Yuka Kurihara

Senior Director of Globalization Services

Scaled Agile

Beth Bock

VP Enterprise Business & Product Segment

Scaled Agile

Alysa Kirkpatrick

Studio Product Management Director

Scaled Agile

Tamara Nation

VP of SAFe Professional Segment

Scaled Agile

Accelerate Value Flow Workshop

Accelerate Value Flow Workshop

Learn how to apply Flow Accelerators to your context in this workshop to deliver value to your customers
faster. After instruction and work time, you’ll see how your area of flow affects the larger system.

When:

June 28, 2023, 1:00 pm – June 29, 2023, 5:00 pm ECT

Where:

Remote

Who:

Agile Coach, Program or Project Manager, Release Train Engineer, SAFe Practice Consultant

Event Overview

This workshop takes place over two days (June 28 and 29) in four-hour sessions from 1-5 pm (CEST).

We designed this eight-hour workshop over two days to support the range of participants needed to optimize one or many value streams.


Who will benefit:
The workshop supports everyone involved with building solutions with SAFe®. This may include, but is not limited to, the following:
• Cross-functional members of Agile Teams, Agile Release Trains, or Solution Trains running for one PI or longer
• A SAFe Portfolio that has already identified its value streams and begun implementing LPM
• Full Agile Teams across multiple value streams within a single Portfolio

What attendees will learn:
• The flow tools and coaching available to them
• Current usage of SAFe Flow Metrics within their organization
• How each of the SAFe Flow Accelerators applies within their organization
• How to align on actions and create a flow-based improvement backlog
• How improvement items affect the larger flow of the value stream or Portfolio

Prerequisites:
This workshop is designed to support a set of cross-functional attendees from value stream(s) applying SAFe for at least one PI.

What’s included:
• Workshop materials
• Eight hours of facilitation from a SAFe Strategic Advisor or SAFe Fellow
• Three hours of prep time with internal SPCs or leaders

Speakers

Rune Christensen Headshot


Rune Christensen

SPCT, Strategic Advisor (Scaled Agile, Inc.)

Rune has more than 20 years of experience working with software and cyber physical solutions within enterprise and public safety communication, insurance, logistics, and energy. He has supported several Enterprises in transforming their ways of working using lean-agile practices and helped them achieve greater business outcomes.

Harry Koehnemann Headshot


Harry Koehnemann

SAFe Fellow, Methodologist (Scaled Agile, Inc.)

Harry Koehnemann is a Methodologist and SAFe Fellow at Scaled Agile Inc., where he helps organizations deliver solutions faster, more predictably, and with high quality. He has spent the past two decades working with large system builders in aerospace, defense, automotive, and other industries, helping them apply Lean, Agile, and MBSE to their engineering practices.

Standard Bank – Successful SAFe Journey to Agile at Scale

Presented at 2017 SAFe Summit by Alex Keyter, Lean-Agile Coach at Standard Bank

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Standard Bank embarked on a SAFe transformation journey in 2014 with IT initiating approximately 600 projects annually to help keep the bank at the leading edge. Historically, teams completed only a small percentage of projects within the defined timeframe, budget, and scope.

A visit to Silicon Valley’s top technology companies by our IT executives triggered the start of a number of Lean-Agile proofs-of-concept, showcasing the potential of Agility in the enterprise. However, their efforts stalled when they attempted to expand beyond a few development teams working in isolation.

With a clear IT strategy in place, the Standard Bank turned to the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe®) and gained support from its executives to forge ahead with deploying the Scaled Agile Framework across the organization. Prior to launching the first Agile Release Train, significant time was spent on designing Portfolios, Programs and SAFe Teams. Standard Bank also initiated programs that focused on transforming management and leadership; developing a culture that fosters autonomy mastery and purpose; and re-skilling individuals to return to the heart of IT as software engineers, quality engineers, and user experience analysts.

With a large number of ARTs already in their third and fourth Program Increment, the value of the SAFe transformation is tangible with the motivated staff producing quality, more frequent, predictable delivery. Coupled with the successes, Standard Bank drives continuous improvement through role maturity, enhanced engineering capability and ART optimization.

Read the full case study.

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Standard Bank – Implementing SAFe and DevOps for Agile in Business

Standard Bank - Implementing SAFe and DevOps

“SAFe provided the structure we needed to scale Agile enterprise-wide. It addressed the complexities and gave us the framework for building portfolios, roles, and jobs to achieve our goals for productivity, morale, and quality.”

Alex Keyter, Lean Agile Transformation Consultant (SPC4), Standard Bank

Challenge:

The bank sought to improve service quality, efficiency, and employee morale, but previous efforts to scale Lean-Agile beyond a few teams had stalled.

Industry:

Financial Services

Solution:

SAFe®

Results:

  • Time-to-market reduced from 700 to 30 days
  • Deployments increased from once or twice a year to monthly
  • Productivity increased 50%
  • Cost decreased by 77%
  • Predictability is now at 68%
  • Organizational health improved by 12 percentage points from 2013 – 2016, thanks in part to SAFe

Best Practices:

  • Focus on culture change – Standard Bank moved from individual recognition to team awards and KPIs. The bank increased excitement and engagement through gamification, skills building, and automation.
  • Get the business involved early – The bank started the transition with IT. In hindsight, they would have engaged business owners sooner so they understood that the change was not just about IT. A handful of progressive thinkers helped influence the others.
  • Don’t forget to focus on engineering – “SAFe, coupled with a focus on engineering, takes it to the next level,” says Mike Murphy, Standard Bank CTO.

Introduction

Based in South Africa, Standard Bank is the largest African banking group, with total assets of ZAR1.95 trillion (USD143 billion). For more than 152 years, the bank has served the continent and is now present in 20 sub-Saharan countries. Standard Bank operates seven different portfolio offerings across business and personal banking, corporate and investment, and wealth management.

Standard Bank - Implementing SAFe and DevOps

At Standard Bank, the IT team embarks on approximately 600 projects every year to help keep the bank at the leading edge. Yet traditionally, teams have completed only a small percentage of projects within the defined timeframe, budget, and scope.

To improve follow-through, Standard Bank tried a few Lean-Agile pilots. However, their efforts stalled when they attempted to expand beyond a few teams working in isolation.

“We were very much a project-based environment,” explains Alex Keyter, Lean Agile Transformation Consultant (SPC4) at Standard Bank. “We tried waterfall, a combined team approach, and other frameworks, but nothing addressed the challenge of delivering value across organizational silos. Standard Bank has over 2,000 systems in IT, which required tremendous coordination to deliver an initiative successfully.”

Changing Culture and Launching POCs

On the back of a number of benchmarks that the bank set locally and internationally, the company initiated a four-pillar IT strategy:

  • Quality of service through brilliant basics, which are defined as IT housekeeping and maintenance; stability of service; and simplifying and reducing complexity
  • Responsiveness to market
  • Sustainability as the foundation of client excellence
  • Affordability through commercial pragmatism

To support its goals, the bank turned to the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe®), and gained backing from executives to move ahead with deploying it. “SAFe provided the structure we needed to scale Agile enterprise-wide,” Keyter says. “It addressed the complexities and gave us the framework for building portfolios, programs, and teams to achieve our strategic goals.”

But prior to rolling out SAFe, Standard Bank initiated various culture initiatives to start driving the change in behavior of leaders and teams, and launched proofs of concept.

“To affect culture change is like pulling out a rubber band,” explains Josef Langerman, Head of Engineering and IT Transformation at Standard Bank. “When the band is relaxed, it returns to its previous comfortable state. One has to exert energy again to pull it out. By doing this repeatedly and in different ways, the band gets softer and more stretched out. Similarly, culture needs continued effort and reliance on many techniques to move it to a new comfortable or desired state. There is no silver bullet.”

The bank took a number of steps to stretch out of its comfort zone:

  • They pulled cross-functional teams together and began delivering on a cadence
  • The Internet Banking and ATM teams modeled breaking work down into smaller, more manageable pieces and demonstrated to stakeholders the work completed during the sprint
  • Business and IT stakeholders joined in during these showcases to provide feedback to the teams
  • They switched their work attire from suits and ties to jeans
  • They began running off-site sessions with IT to define culture themes, change guilds, and more
  • They initiated DevOps initiatives prior to the SAFe implementation but were formalized during the roll-out

As part of the SAFe transition, Standard Bank set out to create a fully automated self-provisioning environment with scripting and used an automation challenge to drive interest in skills. Automation pilots yielded significant tangible results:

  • 20 minutes – Time to deploy application server stack end-to-end
  • 30 seconds – Time to release new code to customers
  • 0 percent – Deployment impact to customers

Additionally, the bank set a clear vision for the future of the organization. At the top, leaders aligned around a common understanding of goals and key performance indicators (KPIs) and emulated Silicon Valley tech leaders on the kind of change and coaching culture required.

At lower levels, the development community participated in defining the future state of the bank. Standard Bank also empowered employees to design their own culture as a group—to achieve true ownership.

Implementing SAFe and DevOps

Prior to launching the first Agile Release Train (ART), Standard Bank portfolios embarked on an outside-in model, moving away from the traditional project structures into a SAFe design construct forming cross-functional Teams, Programs, and Portfolios. The bank set a milestone for the first of July 2016 for teams to co-locate, work from a backlog, and establish visual management of work and self-regulated teams.

With the outside-in design taking shape, Human Capital with support from the Group CIO started a program that focused on re-skilling individuals to repurpose them as software engineers, quality engineers, or user experience analysts. Once they passed the aptitude test and went through the program, they were placed in a feature team. As a result, the organization now has more people getting the work done versus managing it.

“We really broke the old business operating model,” explains Adrian Vermooten, Head of Digital for the Africa Regions. “We said, ‘We’re changing our methodology. We’re moving out of this building and you’re giving up your old jobs.’”

In July 2016, two individuals attended SAFe Program Consultant (SPC) training and returned to begin rapidly training hundreds of team members. From July 2016 through February 2017, Standard Bank trained approximately 1,200 people on Leading SAFe in preparation for its first Program Increment (PI) planning meeting in January 2017.

A division CIO set the tone for executive sponsorship by earning certification as a SAFe Agilist prior to the first PI. Then he and other leaders planned heavily for the first event.

Standard Bank - Implementing SAFe and DevOps

The First PI: A Mind-frame Shift

Leading up to the first Program Increment (PI), the bank evaluated the various internal and external teams impacting Agile Release Trains (ARTs) in the Portfolio and extended invitations accordingly. The first PI brought together 300 people from the Card & Emerging Payments group, which depends on more than 32 systems with numerous codependencies. While challenging, the event succeeded in kicking off a major mind-frame shift.

“The way we normally do things, we inherently start with, ‘Why? And we can’t do that,’ as opposed to this process which was, ‘We can do it, and how?’” stated one of the attendees.

Following a successful PI Planning session, the benchmark was set and other Portfolios soon followed with their first PI Planning sessions.

Productivity Up 50 Percent

These days, with more than 2,000 people trained on Leading SAFe, Lean-Agile practices and SAFe are key parts of Standard Bank’s strategic plan. The move to SAFe delivered a number of benefits, both qualitative and quantitative. Standard Bank succeeded in breaking down silos and improving dependency management. They removed complexity and reduced cost—while building more. Business people now prioritize work and budgets to account for IT change.

The bank notes significant gains within some of the more mature Teams or Portfolios:

  • Time-to-market reduced from 700 to 30 days
  • Deployments increased from once or twice a year to monthly
  • Productivity increased 50 percent
  • Cost decreased by 77 percent
  • Predictability is now at 68 percent
  • Organizational health improved by 12 percentage points from 2013 – 2016

As hoped, the benefits have trickled down to the customer. “We put together some teams that much more closely represent the customer value chain,” Vermooten says.

Beyond the numbers, Vermooten sees the changes firsthand every day. Senior staff members get out from behind their desks and interact more with teams, while junior staff feel more free to share ideas.

“We flattened the organization,” he says. “Before, only senior people would speak up in meetings. Now, in every meeting, junior people are leading the conversation. There’s higher energy and intensity in people. It brings out the best in them.”

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