Capital “A” Agile and lower case “a” agile/agility

Takeshi Yoshida
3 min readAug 29, 2023
(This is an excerpt post from Coach Takeshi’s Agile 101 with edits.)

One VERY helpful framing we use when we go inside organizations to help them on their agile transformation, is the notion of Capital “A” Agile and lower case “a” agile/agility.

Capital “A” Agile is the disciplined application of Agile frameworks such as Scrum, while lower case “a” agile and agility is more about interpreted application of agile mindsets and behavior in day-to-day work.

Practicing capital “A” Agile may require changes in the organizational set-up of where it’s applied; how teams are formed, the role of the leader/manager, the level of decision making power abdicated to the teams, the cadence of their work etc.

Whereas lower case “a” agile is applicable to the whole organization. Because it’s more about embracing the spirit of agile, and adopting/adapting them into day-to-day practices where meaningful.

For example, let’s say that you have a hundred people in a certain department of a specific function. Before implementing a consultant’s proposal to break them up into smaller teams and reducing management layers, i.e. major surgery to the existing functional, hierarchical structure of the department (a pseudo capital “A” Agile measure), there may be many things from lower case “a” agile that the people in the department can learn and apply to improve their work. How…

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Takeshi Yoshida
Takeshi Yoshida

Written by Takeshi Yoshida

Chief Coach, Agile Organization Development (agile-od.com) — we are a tribe of change, transformation, innovation experts

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