Navigating the opportunity-rich environment of the AI age - when your company is considering dozens of "finding AI gold" initiatives - requires discipline AND product-orientation.
I'm working with a PMO leader to develop a product-oriented portfolio management approach in an organization with deep roots in pharma, chemistry, and hardware development.
Meaning an ongoing clash between stage gates and agility/product-orientation.
I'm recalling an exercise we included in the Scrum.org Professional Scrum w/ Kanban - The "Is it Waterfall? Is it Kanban?" exercise is one of my favorites because it explores the folly of extreme views on this.
Being product-oriented and iterative doesn't preclude the use of stage gates.
It precludes big-batch stage gates that lock in too much up front.
It actually benefits from the right sort of stage gates - those that focus on flushing out risks/leap-of-faith-assumptions.
That enables, and even forces, explicit choice between discovery (tracer bullets) and delivery (cannon balls) depending on the risk profile.
Curious - how are YOU thinking about the role and evolution of stage gates in the AI age?
About Yuval's Work
This post is based on Yuval's work helping PMO leaders leverage Agile Product Operating Models to navigate their organization's portfolio of strategic initiatives and programs. Learn more about Yuval's approach to Product-oriented Portfolio Management