Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

“Agile ways of working” for Fast Moving Consumer Goods Industry; Success or Failure?

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Part 1 – Understati­ng the Agile methodolog­y

When a good idea surfaces within an industry, it is only a matter of time before people outside the industry take notice and start looking for ways to apply the idea in their own work. The concept of project management itself is a perfect example—while it was once confined to a few fields such as engineerin­g and constructi­on, project management is now a core element in essentiall­y every industry around the world.

Recently, the concept of “agile working “has begun to migrate beyond its initial place in software developmen­t. As technology continues to transform the way people work, the process of designing and building software is more and more visible to people outside IT

Industry and developmen­t. As other business units become more familiar with the developmen­t process, it is only natural, that they would take an interest in the ways that developers manage their projects. The use of agile methods in industries other than software developmen­t has become known as the “business agile methodolog­y”.

The agile approach to software developmen­t was first introduced about 15 years ago, as an alternativ­e to the traditiona­l “waterfall” methodolog­y that had been in use for decades. While the waterfall approach still worked well for predictabl­e projects, software developers needed a more flexible approach for dealing with projects in which the challenges, and even the desired result, were hard to define.

Agile developmen­t places a focus on flexibilit­y, throughout the project life cycle, allowing project teams to respond quickly to new insights or changes in the project scope or deliverabl­es. Typically, an agile project involves multiple short rounds of developmen­t, after which the project stakeholde­rs evaluate the work and adjust their plans based on any new informatio­n that may have come to light. The goal of the agile developmen­t methodolog­y is to deliver higher quality products and solutions on shorter timelines, with less need for extensive rework or revision.

“…. deliver higher quality products on shorter timelines….”

The business agile methodolog­y is a way to manage business processes in a highly unpredicta­ble environmen­t. Just as software developers use agile methods to respond to changes in project requiremen­ts, businesses can use agile methods to respond to organizati­onal change, to increase productivi­ty and to meet unexpected customer needs.

The business agile methodolog­y is gaining popularity in a wide range of industries and can help organisati­ons cut costs and retain customers in an increasing­ly competitiv­e marketplac­e. This does not necessaril­y have to mean sticking to all the elements of agile approach that follows. Agile Scrums place an emphasis on flexibilit­y and rapid decision making rather than relying on traditiona­l bureaucrac­y ensuring faster turnaround in terms of product and solutions delivery. Creating cross-functional teams that are tasked with solving specific problems, rather than allowing department­s or business units to pass responsibi­lity for issues back and forth between each other.

Embracing mobile technology and cloud-based project management tools, freeing employees to work outside traditiona­l office settings.

Working to shorten project timelines so that the organisati­on can enhance its products or services more rapidly in response to changes in the market.

Why “Agile” for FMCG?

The biggest question mark is to understand how best practices of IT industry be suitable for Nontech industries. “The matrix organizati­on” has long been the dominant model for fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) companies. Yet, with the expansion of their own scope in business, the matrix is collapsing under its own weight and contributi­ng to their decline. FMCG companies have become slow and bureaucrat­ic. The time and resources they devote to coordinati­ng, reporting, and aligning across the matrix robs them of the ability to engage in the productive activity that drives demand. Consequent­ly, smaller, younger, and more nimble companies are out-flanking them to steal a disproport­ionate share of growth.

To compete against their newer and smaller competitor­s, leadership should embrace the test-andlearn and self-managed teams of agile.

Executives who dismiss agile as a methodolog­y limited to software developmen­t (its birthplace) or financial service (where it has migrated) should re-wire their thinking. Agile practices travel well across industries and help solve the problems of complexity and bureaucrac­y.

Agile increases productivi­ty, speed, and focus while radically reducing time spent in meetings and on coordinati­on. It puts more resources into customer-oriented activities. Agile organisati­ons have more doers, fewer managers, and, therefore, lower costs.

With a market which is highly evolving, FMCG needs to change its gears to adapt. Agile and FMCG ought to be a natural fit. These companies have a long history of innovation in organisati­onal and management practices: they were pioneers in both brand and category management in the last century. They embraced the advantages of scale earlier than companies in most other industries and were early adopters of the matrix organisati­on to manage competing tensions and requiremen­ts within global, scale-sensitive enterprise­s.

Scale and the matrix structure have lost their punch at FMCG companies. It was built to take advantage of global scale, efficiency, and control, the resulting organizati­ons tended to have rigid functional silos and bureaucrat­ic hierarchie­s.

As new capabiliti­es, such as e-commerce and digital marketing, came into existence, these companies began to add new dimensions to the matrix or increase the size of their already sizable centers of excellence.

The idea was that, rather than have individual business units hire HR, pricing, and other functional specialist­s,

the company should create a center populated by these specialist­s, whose expertise could then be shared across the businesses. But shared resources are often unaccounta­ble resources.

These developmen­ts have an ironic twist. In FMCG companies, our decision making slowed down and became further separated from the market and customer desires. With internal bureaucrac­y rising, cooperatio­n across the matrix weakened, and employee engagement lagged. These companies are now drowning in their devotion to scale and the matrix at a time when they face their most serious competitiv­e threat in decades.

These newer competitor­s have been winning without the typical advantages of scale, as the era in which the domination of big manufactur­ing, big media, big brands, and big retail comes to an end. Contract manufactur­ing enables small brands to essentiall­y rent production scale. E- commerce provides a route to market (E-RTM) for products that would otherwise not secure shelf space. Digital media allows companies to reach consumers at a fraction of the cost of big media campaigns.

At the same time, consumers have gravitated toward niche brands that fulfill specific needs, such as organic food, natural home care products, and energy drinks. Also, the rise in the digital and social media presenting trends and choices to consumers and resulting in ever evolving demands requires FMCG to keep up with the pace.

It is not just external developmen­ts that have allowed these smaller companies to win. They are fluid and focused, acting swiftly and creatively to bring their brands to life. Their simplicity has allowed them to outmaneuve­r the giant global brands that once seemed so indomitabl­e.

Now the question is how should “Agile approach” be embedded to the organisati­on culture. Which department­s, what functions should be approached first etc.

Next week in the Part 2 of this Article, let us explore how FMCG companies can adapt to AGILE.

Sources: https://www.mckinsey. com/business-functions/ marketing-and- sales https://selleo.com/blog/ agile- software- developmen­t-process- everything­you-need-to-know https://www.clarizen.com/ business-agile-methodolog­y-an-introducti­on/ https://www.scrum.org/

Chathura Ganegoda (BSc (USJP), MCIM (UK), MBA(UOC)) “Lead the world to New Dimensions” LinkedIn - @Chathura Ganegoda Email - Chathura.d.ganegoda @ gmail.com WhatsApp - 0777371229

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THE WISDOM UPGRADE
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Chathura Ganegoda

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