How Agile Teams Grow Toxic! Ep. 1 Founder Values
Agile Development • Leadership • Software Company Culture
The core values, or motivation for starting the software company that the founders have can keep an agile team from becoming toxic.
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One of the most frustrating things over my career has been working at companies where the workplace culture has become toxic.
Though many companies hire agile coaches to try and improve the way they deliver, in my experience the leaders are the ones who most need “agile transformation”.
This video kicks off a series called “How Agile Teams Grow Toxic“.
I’ll share the dark side of human behavior on projects, and why the situation can seem almost impossible to improve.
In this episode, I discuss how the core value, or motivation for starting the software company that the founders have impacts this greatly.
Most software companies or projects are started for one of the following 3 reasons:
- Money
- Fame
- Impact
It’s preferable if you can find a company with founders (or leadership if the founder left) that are motivated by impact.
But this won’t guarantee that the project will be successful! You should also look at where the founders skills originated.
Did they come from a business, or engineering background?
This will give you some ideas as well about the founder values.
Ultimately, you want to find a software company or product where the leadership are looking to YOU for innovation and help.
Not treating you like a pawn who can only crank out code and shouldn’t think about the business or its products.
I discuss a simple way to research founders and other members of the management team at a company to get an idea of whether the culture there is healthy.
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About the THRIVING TECHNOLOGIST show
On YouTube and all major podcast networks, Jayme shares teamwork and leadership strategies, guidelines for healthy company culture, and stories about real projects so you can have a sustainable career in the software industry.
Jayme Edwards
A family man and veteran of nearly 40 software projects, Jayme experienced many wins and losses over his career as an architect and consultant.
Now he's coaching software developers, managers, and business owners to overcome challenges in the IT industry - so they keep growing.