Case Study: Agile Transition in a Service SME

How to manage the transition from traditional methodology to Agile in a service SME? This simulation immerses students in the concrete challenges of organizational transformation under client pressure.

At a glance

Sector

services

Audience

Master

Format

Interactive simulation

Technology

AI-powered NPCs

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The context

This service SME with 244 employees generates over 5 million euros in annual revenue. The company develops software solutions for its clients and traditionally works according to a waterfall approach.

The project team consists of a general manager and a technical director, both highly experienced and accustomed to structured analytical methods. A project manager coordinates technical developments. The classic hierarchical organization is beginning to show its limits in the face of growing market reactivity requirements.

The CloudSync project represents a major financial stake with a 1.2 million euro contract. This strategic project serves as an experimentation ground for a potential transformation towards Agile methods, in a context where delivery speed becomes crucial.

The problem

The company faces a major client ultimatum that threatens the sustainability of a strategic contract. The client demands visible improvements within two weeks, revealing weaknesses in the current methodological approach. This time pressure forces the organization to question its established processes.

Resistance to change manifests concretely through conflicts over role redistribution. The team is divided between supporters of the old system, reassured by known processes, and promoters of change towards Agile. This organizational tension directly impacts productivity with a 30% drop.

Management must simultaneously handle client urgency, internal change management, and learning new methodologies. This triple constraint perfectly illustrates the managerial challenges of organizational transformation in a crisis context.

The stakes

The immediate financial stake concerns retaining a 1.2 million euro contract, representing nearly 25% of revenue. Beyond the financial aspect, the company's reputation and credibility are at stake with a major client.

The organizational stake concerns the company's ability to evolve towards greater agility without destabilizing its operations. Managing human resistance and change management become critical success factors. The team must learn to collaborate differently while maintaining performance.

The long-term strategic stake concerns the company's digital transformation. This transition to Agile constitutes a real-world test for adaptation to digital services market requirements, where reactivity and continuous innovation have become determining competitive advantages.

Skills developed

1

Change management

leading organizational transformation in crisis context

2

Project management

mastering Agile methodologies and comparing with Waterfall approach

3

Team leadership

managing resistance and uniting around a common vision

4

Crisis management

making quick decisions under client pressure

5

Management communication

facilitating dialogue between stakeholders with divergent interests

Learning progression

1

Round 1

Analysis of client ultimatum and methodological choice. Students compare Waterfall and Agile to define a transition strategy adapted to crisis context.

2

Round 2

Managing resistance and defining new roles. Focus on RACI matrix and resolving organizational conflicts related to change.

3

Round 3

Operational implementation and collective learning. First sprint planning and capitalizing on transition phase lessons.

Target audience

This business simulation is designed for Master's level students in management, project management, or digital transformation. It is particularly suitable for programs combining management theory and operational practice.

Continuing education profiles, notably managers wanting to understand Agile transformation challenges, will find in this case study a concrete application of theoretical concepts. The moderate complexity allows progressive appropriation of issues without overwhelming learners new to project management.

Key takeaways

Agile transformation requires human support as much as methodological

Client pressure can be a change catalyst but also a resistance factor

Clear definition of roles and responsibilities conditions transition success

Learning through experimentation enables progressive appropriation of new practices

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