In the majority of cases, a Scrum Master functions as a disruptor of complacency – the focus of their work lies in continuous improvement, finding ways to remove impediments, ultimately becoming someone that would guide the organisation towards agility. Having said that, what an organisation declares they want to achieve does not necessarily mean they are going to take any steps towards achievement of the said goals.
For HR branding reasons, it is not cool to actively hire Project Secretaries or Project Coordinators – someone to do low-effort administrative tasks and help speak on behalf of the people getting things done. Such positions do not require any specific agile framework knowledge, they are barely visible, and won’t be there to transform the organisation or bring any challenges for the leadership a Scrum Master could do. If a Scrum Master is hired for such a position, the frustration caused by a mismatch between what a Scrum Master expects their work to be and what turns out to be the reality in such cases.
After a certain amount of time, a Scrum Master hired for anything but being a Scrum Master starts looking for a new job – the inability to create positive change really goes a long way. In order to avoid a downward spiral, here are a few observations that you probably should give up on fighting in an unwinnable battle:
- Your initiatives are being deprioritised – the suggestions you are putting forward are not getting enough traction even if this is something the team wants to see happen and is a pure “bottom-up” example.
- Your meetings are the first ones to be rescheduled, even if the agenda clearly benefits the Stakeholder participants – okay, imagine a situation. You agree to have a one-to-one meeting with someone up there in the food chain, you agree on time, schedule a meeting – only to get it rescheduled by the Stakeholder multiple times. Reschedule it once – feels like something that could happen to anyone, reschedule the same meeting twice – seems like a cascade of unfortunate events. At the third rescheduling it is always better to cancel the meeting altogether, as it doesn’t receive needed traction. Describe (without going into details) the idea in a quick email and carry on with your day.
- Your responsibilities are becoming blurrier with each day – there is a fine line between “supporting a Product Owner” and “managing the Product Backlog in their stead”. If you have a question in your head that sounds something like “but why is this something I should be doing instead of this position”, and nobody can give you a clear answer to this question – then your inner voice is right, and the leadership just doesn’t know what Scrum Masters should be doing.
- …or your responsibilities are those of court jesters – yes, Scrum Masters are responsible for having a positive atmosphere in the team. No, this is not their only responsibility – if you feel like the only input you produce is similar to being a comic relief character in some cheap romcom, maybe something has gone terribly wrong, and this very position is not capable of providing you with actual responsibilities.
- You have to defend yourself all the time – in a faux agile organisation you will never be fully understood, and if there are any disagreements you will have a need to defend your positions against everyone instead of having a sustainable collaborative process of reaching consensus. And, most importantly,
- Your leadership fails you.