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Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Technology Adoption and the "No"-gates

Let's say you've found some new, good way to do business.

JSON, for example. Or Agile Methods in general. Or TDD specifically. Or use of an ORM.

You read up on it. You build a spike solution to show that it's more efficient.

The First No-Gate

You make The Essential Pitch. You keep it simple and direct.

A manager says "that's too Blah-Blah-Blah, we don't want to add the cost/risk/complexity." Of course, it doesn't matter what specific things are said. This is management "No #1". We just can't. There is too much "we" (that is, "I, as a non-technical manager") don't understand.

The first answer must generally be "No." No manager can agree unless it was their idea before it was your idea. If they'd already heard of this and ask you to look into it, then you might get a yes. But if it was your idea first, management must say "No".

You work some more, you refine your pitch to address the Blah-Blah-Blah issue and show that it does not actually increase cost, risk or complexity.

BTW, there's no point in trying to pre-empt the initial "No". It has to be there. You have to get specific objections, so you have to go through this "No" gate.

The Second No-Gate

You make the Address-Your-Concerns Pitch. You elaborate with lots of what-ifs and alternatives and objections and solutions. Two Powerpoint slides expand to about a dozen.

A manager says "I'm not sure that it has the cost-benefit we need to see." This is management "No #2". We just can't afford it. [Yes, this is a repeat of the cost argument, but it's different because the expected response is now different.]

The second answer must always "raise the bar" from technical issues to monetary issues.

At this point, you really can't go too far. There's essentially no cost-benefit information on any element of any technology stack in use anywhere. No one sits down and finds the most cost-effective operating system, the most cost-effective language, the most cost-effective protocols. There's no data and cost-benefit is not a core part of approval. It's tangential at best.

Further, the real answer in technology selection always boils down to skills. Does the organization have the necessary skills? Do they understand it?

You work some more, you refine your pitch to address the cost-benefit issue and show that it does not actually increase cost, may reduce risk, and have have some tangible benefits.

The Third No-Gate

You make the Cost-Benefit pitch. You try to keep it factual.

At this point, you've entered a loop. Essentially, you must be redirected to address one more concern. That concern, once addressed, won't have the monetization. Back and forth until something breaks you out of the loop.

You're stuck here because there's no compelling reason to adopt. Managers talk about cost and risk and benefits and other vaguely monetary ways to determine if the technology has or creates value. But those are reasons to say "no", not "yes." Technology rarely has a compelling monetized business case. It's just a little better or a little less risky. But that involves change and any change is inherently more risky than anything else.

Remember: the first fax machine was useless until someone else got a fax machine.

So you iterate. Pitch, refine. Pitch, refine.

Compulsion

At some point, you either implement your spike solution, which makes management's approval a fait accompli, or some force outside IT (business demand for a new kind of software product, external force from competitors) compels the organization to make a change.

Note that there has been no change to the technology itself. JSON was unacceptable until a customer demanded JSON-format files. Now JSON is required. The organization, however, has flipped from "No with a million reasons" to "Yes".

Agile cannot be done until a customer requires it. TDD has no ROI until someone gets their project done early because of TDD. An ORM is needless complexity until the new web framework requires it.

At this point, there are a series of steps to go from "acceptable" to "required" to "standard" to "irreplaceable legacy". Those just as puzzling as the No-Gates.

Finesse

It isn't possible to finesse this and reduce the frustration. The organization must resist change until compelled to make the change. Once compelled, it must then stumble forward as though all the nay-saying never happened. And what could have been a simple technology adoption must turn into a morass of competing bad ideas.

So, we can (and should) continue to find new technology. We can (and will) make the pitch. We will be shot down.

The trick is not to take it personally. Just keep refining so that when the organization is eventually compelled to adopt, we've already got it planned out.

2 comments:

  1. Check out "Stop Trying to Reinvent the Wheel by Scott Berkun" (http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/jun2010/id2010062_565850.htm).

    The key paragraph: The second reason for reinvention pertains to ego and rewards. In many corporations there is more prestige to be gained for making something new than for reusing work done elsewhere in the company or industry. This is true even when the newly made thing is much worse that what already existed. An executive might proclaim the wonders of the new (worse) thing to his division without encountering anyone willing to stand up for the old (better) thing. It's harder to inflate the importance of one's own work if the key decision was to buy or borrow from elsewhere. The verbs "make," "invent," and "create" lead to more promotions than "reuse," "borrow," or "convert." In Pavlovian terms, if a culture rewards unnecessary reinvention more than it honors wise reuse, the ambitious will follow suit. Asking people to behave one way while rewarding them for another has predictable results. The counter notion to NIH—"PFE," or "Proudly Found Elsewhere"—has been talked about before, but I've rarely seen it thrive.

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  2. Where Are The Yes Men?
    Warren Meyer, 06.24.10, 01:00 PM EDT

    url: http://www.forbes.com/2010/06/24/bp-obama-bureaucracy-oil-opinions-columnists-warren-meyer.html

    ... hundreds of people involved who, given their incentives, are virtually programmed to say "no." ... everyone can say "no," and worse, since their incentives are loaded toward risk avoidance (they get punished for violating procedure, but never punished for missing an opportunity), they have a tendency to say "no" a lot, in fact to say "no" by default. In the Gulf we have a thousand federal employees from 20 agencies whose entire incentive system--whose entire career--whose every lesson from every bureaucratic battle in a sort of long-term aversion therapy, prompts them to say "no" by reflex ...

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