Rock Teams

Every organization has projects that they just don't seem to be able to make progress on because no one team or department is responsible. When they become critically urgent, a 'rock team' is a way to make significant progress inside a quarter.

Rock Teams
A barn-raising proceeds at shocking speed when a large group comes together at exactly the right time. I like how this group is wearing shirts of the same color. Photo by Randy Fath / Unsplash

How to deliver your toughest projects in under 13 weeks.

Context

A difficult project that requires multiple teams or groups to come together in a new way. Treating it like 'business as usual' hasn't worked. The time has come to make significant progress in a short period of time.

Discussion

There are two working modes most tech people are familiar with:

  • the cross-functional delivery team, a group of 5-10 people working together daily, full-time, to build something in some collaborative style
  • the project, where a project manager chases many people to complete tasks--often people whose day job is other work outside of the project

Each of these approaches have limitations. A delivery team works best with 7-10 people or fewer because communication is natural. If you're doing something big, you usually need some more formal structures.

But a project manager trying to manage work across many people and teams has to do a lot of extra coordination work, which can be exhausting and slow. They are often in competition with other project managers for the attention of the people who work on the project. Thus, projects tend to be late.

So if you need results in a relatively short period of time on complex work, what to do?

Play

Establish a temporary, virtual rock team who engage with high commitment and collaborate rapidly across the organization. This team uses agile methods for daily and weekly coordination - even though each team member also has a day job as a member of a different team.

I'm calling this a rock team because it's a natural fit for the play 3 Quarterly Rocks. But it works equally well if you're using OKRs and have a quarterly objective that requires people from multiple teams to come together.

A rock team requires five things:

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Jamie Larson
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