• Call It What You Want. Can You Deliver?
    May 4 2026

    The framework wars are over, and the only question that still matters is whether the work is landing in your customers' hands.

    This episode dives into the great convergence of project management and agility. Job titles are blending, PMI is leaning hard into adaptive approaches, and the new PMBOK reads nothing like the tablet of stone we used to study. The lines between Scrum Master and Project Manager have blurred in the marketplace, and forward-thinking leaders are leaning into the blend instead of fighting it.

    Most organizations are not picking sides anymore; they are picking outcomes. The question is no longer "are we doing real Scrum" or "are we doing proper Project Management." The question is whether your teams are delivering value, learning fast, and treating their customers like the heroes of the story.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • Why "technical project manager" and "Scrum Master" have quietly become the same role on most job boards
    • How PMI and Agile Alliance moved from rivals to partners, and what the new PMBOK signals about the future
    • The Shuhari path of mastery, and why so many teams skip straight to “ri” without earning it
    • The better questions leaders should be asking instead of arguing about labels
    Show More Show Less
    27 mins
  • You Don’t Have a Strategy Problem: You Have an Execution Problem
    Apr 27 2026

    High-performing organizations don’t just plan better: They shorten the distance between decision, action, and learning.

    This episode closes out the deep dive into the Manifesto for Enterprise Agility. This week covers the three principles of execution: move authority to where value is created, deliver value frequently and make work visible, and sense early, learn quickly, and act with confidence.

    Most organizations don’t have a strategy problem; they have an execution problem. Work moves too slowly, stays invisible, and sits disconnected from the people best placed to decide what to do next. These three principles are the mechanics for fixing that.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • Why authority must travel with accountability if empowerment is going to be real
    • Using Management 3.0’s Delegation Poker to make decision rights explicit
    • What ’making work visible’ really means beyond having a Jira board
    • Why a Sprint Review should be a real show and tell, not a smoke-and-mirrors PowerPoint
    • How sensing early shortens the gap between signal, decision, and action
    • Why psychological safety, air cover, and a learning culture sit underneath all three principles
    Show More Show Less
    26 mins
  • Org Design for Agility: Guardrails, Flexible Funding, and Building for Adaptability
    Apr 20 2026

    Most organizations don't need more frameworks: they need fewer constraints.

    This episode continues the deep dive into the Manifesto for Enterprise Agility, this week tackling the three principles of organizational design. From guardrails vs. gatekeepers to funding teams over projects, we unpack why the way most organizations are structured is quietly killing their agility.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • Why empowering teams starts with replacing gatekeepers with guardrails
    • The case for funding outcomes and value streams, not projects
    • Why efficiency is the enemy of adaptability and what to focus on instead
    • Delegation Poker and other practical tools for shifting decision-making culture
    • Why your org design will stop your agility before your methodology ever will
    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • Purpose, Partners, and Technology: The Leadership Principles Behind Enterprise Agility
    Apr 13 2026

    What separates truly agile organizations from those just going through the motions? It starts with leadership behavior, specifically, three principles from the Manifesto for Enterprise Agility that challenge leaders to think bigger than their org chart. In this episode, we unpack what it means to create real clarity of purpose, extend agility beyond your organizational boundaries, and put technology and distributed talent at the core of how your company creates value.

    Key takeaways from this episode:

    • Clarity of purpose enables confident decision-making: when teams truly understand enterprise outcomes, they can adapt plans as conditions change without waiting for permission
    • Enterprise agility doesn't stop at your front door: in an increasingly interdependent value ecosystem, agility must extend to partners, vendors, and contractors
    • Technology, data, and AI aren't support functions: they're core to how companies create value, make decisions, compete, and respond in a fast-changing environment
    • Distributed talent requires intentional equity: technology and inclusion practices must make remote and hybrid team members active participants, not observers on the outside looking in
    • Agility isn't about moving faster: it's about removing what's actually slowing you down

    Ask yourself this week: Does your entire organization understand your purpose well enough to adapt with confidence when conditions change?

    Show More Show Less
    35 mins
  • Agility belongs to all of us... and a new Manifesto just made it official
    Apr 7 2026

    25 years ago, the Manifesto for Agile Software Development gave teams a new way to work. Last month, PMI released the Manifesto for Enterprise Agility and it belongs to every leader, every function, every layer of the organization.

    We dug into all four values on the latest Team KatAnu podcast episode, what they mean, why they matter now, and what shifts when leaders take ownership of agility.

    The next chapter of agility is here. And it starts at the top!

    Show More Show Less
    28 mins
  • Surfing the Wave: How to Protect Your Energy When Change Isn't Yours to Lead
    Mar 30 2026

    Every episode this month has been aimed at the people leading change. This one is for everyone else.

    Most of us aren't the ones calling the change, we're the ones living it. And nobody hands you a manual for how to handle a mandate that landed from above, a team that's frustrated, and a world that won't stop shifting long enough to catch your breath.

    In this episode, we talk about what it actually looks like to protect your energy, your credibility, and your sanity when change is happening all around you. From finding your island of stability to the 80-20 rule for what you can actually control, to why assuming positive intent might be the most powerful thing you can do - this is the human survival guide for change that nobody gave you.

    Because the moment you start freaking out, that's when you drown. Learn to surf instead.

    Show More Show Less
    28 mins
  • The Change Catalyst: Leading Beyond the "What" to the "Why"
    Mar 23 2026

    Change rarely fails because the idea itself was wrong. More often, it fails because leaders communicate poorly, move too fast, contradict their own message, or expect people to buy in before they understand why the change matters. Real change leadership is not about having a perfect rollout plan. It is about building trust, creating clarity, involving people early, adapting as you learn, and leading with consistency when uncertainty shows up. If you want change to last, start there.

    Show More Show Less
    32 mins
  • Resistance to Change Isn’t the Problem… Your Culture Is
    Mar 16 2026

    Organizations often assume that resistance to change comes from stubborn employees or teams unwilling to adapt. But the real barrier is rarely the people - it’s the culture surrounding them.

    In this episode, we explore the cultural dynamics that make change so difficult to implement. From fear of the unknown to lingering scars from past initiatives that failed, teams often carry memories and assumptions that shape how they respond to new efforts.

    We also examine why “we tried that before and it didn’t work” is one of the most common, and most misunderstood, responses leaders encounter during transformation.

    More importantly, we focus on practical ways organizations can move forward:

    • Creating environments where experimentation is safe
    • Learning from past failures instead of ignoring them
    • Building transparency and trust during transformation
    • Encouraging shared learning instead of isolated expertise

    Because when organizations build cultures that support learning, collaboration, and honest reflection, change stops feeling like disruption and starts becoming a normal part of how teams improve.

    Show More Show Less
    27 mins