Zones and Projects
3 minute read
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What differentiates a zone from a project?
An adaptive organization needs to be able to put the right people together to do the right work. To achieve this, an organization can create temporary work zones or Adaptive Implementation Zones (AIZ). Zones share some characteristics with projects, but they also have key differences
Similarities Between Zones and Projects:
Both are tasked with "getting something done" and have defined responsibilities
An organization can have multiple zones or projects running simultaneously
Both are inherently temporary - when the need is gone, the zone or project is disbanded
Neither has responsibility for operations
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Key Differences Between Zones and Projects:
End-to-End View: A zone has exclusive responsibility for implementation from end to end (idea to value delivered), eliminating internal hand-offs
Projects may only focus on part of the job
Team View: Zones are formed with teams, not individuals
Variable Scope: A zone can expand or contract as needed to accommodate changing business needs, with teams joining or leaving as development work demands. Projects typically have a defined scope, but as a learning organization, both the scope and the timelines may change as new information is processed in the zone
Changing Collaboration Structures: Within a zone, team collaboration structures can constantly adapt to optimize flow and respond to changing needs - while this is possible in a project, it is built into zones. Regular sync events consider the best collaboration mode for the zone and adjust as necessary
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In summary, Zones leverage the benefits of projects without the baggage.