An easy way to inject energy in your team

The Easiest way to Inject energy in any team.png

A recent HBR article discussed how having a “Shadow Board” of younger employee empowers and energizes a company. I think this is a brilliant idea, the act of bringing younger staff into limelight and positions of power amplifies their voice and views, engages them in the companies initiatives and injects a huge amount of energy into the company’s every day actions. As the article shows in real life how this injection of energy makes a big difference, the fashion giant Gucci started a shadow board from 2015 composed mainly of Millennials. “The shadow board includes people drawn from different functions”, CEO Mario Bizzarri says “with the most talented people in the organization — many of them very young.” and their feedback has “served as a wakeup call for the executives”. Gucci’s sales have increased by 136% between 2014-2018 during the time this board had been active.

This idea of a shadow board and the idea of empowering the younger members of a team and giving them a role in injecting ideas and direction of the company may be new to large corporations but for many smaller software companies this is pretty much a tried and tested method of making the team dynamic. At Kaz we have been practicing this right from the start. Every new group of “freshers” (or “freshly hatched” as they are called by senior team members as a friendly jest) have had a chance to be part of some important decision making over the years. We have benefited a lot by this injection energy and idea. I want to share how we do this and hope this might give you some ideas to try out at your company.

Making a young “alt tech lead”

As with any software company, Kaz runs with small groups (ideally below 7) or teams developers led by a tech lead. What we encourage actively is for the younger (usually the youngest) members to become a kind of alternative tech lead. An open culture where their is no walls between individual team members obviously help with this. The “alt tech lead” then has a voice and feels like she can point out errors and come up with new ideas much better than the senior members of the team. This alternative voice is excellent in breaking down bias in software design that sometimes creeps in because of the past experience of senior members who tend to drive the same ideas and technology on every new project. Giving the younger members the role of this alt tech lead also encourages her to pick up skills and knowledge that she has to use to defend her ideas. A perfect win win situation, particularly in the fast moving software development world where everything changes in a matter of a few years and keeping up on new technology is a must for every team.

Giving younger members leadership on events

We usually make younger members of the company manager for various events that happen at Kaz. These events can range from tech workshops to multi day trip outside the country. This leadership helps younger members in meeting other staff outside their immediate team and also for developers this is very good opportunity to learn management and collaboration skills for working with non-tech members. This is essential for a software developer since at some time of their career they will have to interact more and more with the customer and other stakeholders of the software project.

Giving junior staff a forum to voice their ideas

This comes in many flavors. At its simplest it’s actually a software forum or group where everyone has a right to say what they feel. We call this the underground - almost like separate power center where the management doesn’t have full control. This is superb to hear new ideas, or more importantly criticisms and gripes about management policy, practices etc. This is an invaluable source of information and acts as pulse to check how things are going and what needs to change.

The ideas and energies of the younger staff members is an amazing source of dynamism for any company. Particularly in software companies the young comes with new ideas and skills about technology that the older staff members just don’t have. Not to harness this power is a big loss, yet I feel it is not utilized as much as it should be. Remember the lines “Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind!”