AI-supported Org Design

AI-supported Org Design

AI, of course, can be used to improve the performance of individual single-skilled specialists, and this is what we see as of 2025, but there is a large landscape. Let me share.

AI-Supported Org Design (“AI OD” for short) will be becoming a hugely impactful topic affecting all of us and all the organizations in which we work.

AI OD is the strategic practice of applying AI (agents and other upcoming innovations) to continuously inform, accelerate, and personalize how an organization is structured, how it evolves, and how its people learn.

It’s not about replacing managers or employees (!) —it’s about empowering us to design adaptable, resilient orgs with fewer structural overhauls and more intelligence baked into the day-to-day.

☝️ The core organizing principle: AI Makes Versatile Teams Viable.

☝️ The core operating principle: With Multi-Learning as the Engine.

Requirement Areas

In the last months, I’ve had many conversations in the LeSS community as well as in the product I work for, about Requirement Areas. From those discussions, I’ve discovered new ways of explaining them. Here, I’d like to share some of these.

What are Requirement Areas?

Requirement Areas is a grouping of items on the product roadmap used to create a view on the Product Backlog. This view helps us structure the teams accordingly.

Then what is the product roadmap? A product roadmap is a high-level view of the Product Backlog. In the LeSS books, Craig and I talk about items in the backlog that can have ancestors. Nowadays, I refer to items that have ancestors as “roadmap items”. Together they form a high-level view of the Product Backlog, which is usually referred to as the Product Roadmap. Requirement Areas is a grouping or categorizing items on the product roadmap that we use for structuring the work.

From Silos to Synergy - Our Journey to One Product Backlog with LeSS

In this episode, we have the privilege of having Mauro Sacchi, an esteemed leader in digital R&D at Wärtsilä, whose innovative approach and vast experience in transforming traditional industries into agile powerhouses.

I’m excited to share our transformation story at Wärtsilä, where we’ve embraced Large-Scale Scrum (LeSS) principles to break down organizational silos and unlock our teams’ full potential. This journey wasn’t just about implementing a framework – it was about fundamentally changing how we approach product development and team collaboration.

The Challenge: Fragmented Firepower

When I took over leadership of our digital R&D organization three years ago, I encountered two critical challenges:

  1. Inability to direct our firepower to the most valuable work - Our organization was fragmented into silos, with over 10 teams each maintaining their own separate backlogs.
  2. Human potential diminished by hierarchical structures - Brilliant people with advanced degrees in physics and mathematics were being treated as mere code producers rather than valuable contributors to product decisions.

Let me illustrate this with a real scenario: One team was working on something extremely valuable for a customer who had complained about our development not meeting promises. Meanwhile, other teams couldn’t help because they were bound to their own backlogs and priorities – even though those priorities were objectively less valuable.

LeSS Simulation - Create A City Guide

The LeSS City Guide Simulation is an interactive, hands-on activity designed to help participants experience the dynamics of multiple teams working together on a single product.

In this updated version of the Nexus Zoo simulation, the focus is shifted to a practical project: creating a city guide for the city where the training is taking place. Unlike the Nexus Zoo simulation, this exercise incorporates events typically seen in LeSS adoptions, such as a Self-Design Team Workshop and Multi-Team Refinement, to better simulate LeSS dynamics.

Dealing with Spill-over Items

Introduction

Spill-over or carryover items are common in many teams. Unfortunately. Focusing on avoiding spill-over can have a positive impact on the team and team dynamics. This article provides insights into what spill-over is, why it’s important, how to prevent it, and what not to do to avoid it, along with strategies for measurement and improvement.