Zombie teams

13 Jun 2023 | management, teams, case study

This is a little story about a "zombie" team I was given and how I was able to disband it and save the team members.

The Team

I started my role in this company as a senior engineering manager. As I normally do in my first week, I met with my teams, teamies and their stakeholders.

I noticed a few key issues with one team:

I came away with a clear impression that this team was on life support, and that keeping them together until the new platform was launched wouldn't result in their performance improving, and would likely result in one or more resignations.

Next Steps

  1. I proposed disbanding the team in the next week's stakeholder meeting, and was able to gain understanding and agreement about the scope of the problem and the need for action.
  2. I created a draft proposal, outlining the issues above, risks and opportunities. I included some leads about other teams I'd move people to.
  3. I announced my plan to the team and drew their cautious agreement.
  4. I negotiated with other managers and stakeholders to find teams who could take on new members.
  5. I facilitated the team and stakeholders collaborating on the proposal document to negotiate the transition details and mitigate risks.
  6. Through asynchronous collaboration, the team and stakeholders developed a plan to create a new part-time micro-team which would cover critical bugs only, ensuring work was not completely abandoned.

This process took less than two weeks.

Outcomes

🚩 Do you have a zombie team?

Some signs to look out for:

If you do have a team like this, don't stick to small changes or simple hope. Be bold and take radical action.