After analyzing dozens of posts on this site spanning 2023-2024, a clear pattern emerges about our "Wagile" disaster. Here's what actually happened:
## Leadership Failures
- Executives who couldn't explain agile basics pushed it hardest
- Middle managers gave waterfall instructions while demanding agile results
- Revolving door of transformation champions with no follow-through
- Cronyism: "Bring your banking buddies" over qualified internal candidates
## Wrong Context, Wrong Application
- Banking regulation fundamentally conflicts with "fail fast" mentality
- Complex legacy systems can't be treated like a mobile app startup
- "We're NOT changing the color of a button! We're replacing mission-critical systems that interface with 20+ others"
- Forcing every team into the same framework regardless of function
## Catastrophic Implementation Decisions
- Eliminating entire QA departments ("We'll QA it in prod!")
- Mass removal of project managers with nothing to fill the coordination gap
- Creating role confusion between scrum masters/product owners/managers
- Offshore inconsistencies: "You can't be agile with 40% of your team in India"
## Toxic Results
- Fear-based culture where saying "yes" matters more than quality
- "Watermelon projects" - green on outside, red inside
- JIRA ticket counts over actual value delivery
- Documentation burden increased, not decreased
The saddest part? Real agile principles (collaboration, continuous improvement, customer value) could have helped WF. Instead, we got "Wagile" - all the meetings and buzzwords with none of the benefits.
No wonder our best people are leaving.
[This analysis based on employee experiences shared on this site between January 2023 - May 2024]