How agile helps attract and retain millennial tech pros (As Seen on CIO.com)

IT organizations are in search of talent, but they are finding that the agile methodology is great for attracting and retaining the next generation of engineers and developers.

Autonomy, mastery and purpose

One of the hallmarks of the millennial generation is its need for autonomy, mastery and purpose in the work they’re doing, and a demonstrable impact on the success of the companies they work for and the larger world around them. It’s one of the reasons millennial software engineers embrace the agile methodology, with its emphasis on flat management, self-regulating teams, business context, iteration and ability to adapt quickly to changing needs and demands, says Dave West, product owner at Scrum.org.

“Agile and scrum were developed in the 1980s to address the exact challenges that millennials claim they want in a professional organization: They want to be autonomous, they want to be creative, they want to collaborate around a shared mission and values, and they need the larger context around the work they’re doing. They are motivated by mastery, autonomy and purpose,” says West.

In agile and scrum, the focus is on the outcome of a project and the “why” of solving a business problem, not on “how” it’s done, which was a major problem with the traditional waterfall method of development, West says. The strict hierarchies of waterfall didn’t allow for much creativity, collaboration or knowledge-sharing, at least from the developers and engineers who were working on the projects, and those constraints often affected outcomes, says Zubin Irani, CEO of agile transformation consultancy cPrime.

“A lot of the older generation of tech and engineering managers came from military backgrounds and brought with them a very top-down, order-and-rank, hierarchical style of management. But millennials don’t work well under that style. Instead, they gravitate to agile because they can work with the business; they know what they’re building, why it’s more important than other projects, and they collaborate with the business on different ideas and suggestions for making the project a success,” Irani says.

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