Most transformations fail leadership at the same two points, almost without exception. This path is built around closing both gaps — before the transformation begins.
When organizations undertake a transformation — Agile, DevOps, Product — we see the same mistakes repeat at the leadership level, almost without exception.
Leaders don't need Scrum or Kanban training. Teaching frameworks to leadership is not just unhelpful — it speaks the wrong language entirely. What leaders need is a fundamentally different curriculum than the one built for practitioners on the ground.
You cannot install new behavior on top of ingrained habits. Before leadership can think and act in new ways, they have to first understand — and let go of — the ways of working that built their success in a different era.
If leadership can step back and understand why their traditional ways of working will not succeed in today's rapidly changing environment, only then is there a real chance of changing those ways of working — and earning genuine support for the transformation ahead.
These are all pieces of organizational alignment. None of them is organizational alignment. The real subject is how an organization's strategy cascades down to its lowest levels — and whether it cascades back up again.
Ask the questions that actually diagnose the problem:
If you ask someone at the lowest level of the organization to succinctly explain the organization's strategy — can they?
Are teams overwhelmed with meetings or emails that exist to compensate for strategy that never landed clearly the first time?
Do you hear comments like "we were told we had to use Scrum" or "we had to use this tool" — language that signals compliance, not understanding?
Diagnosing why fast motion at the leadership level can still mean zero organizational progress.
Tracing how (and where) strategic intent breaks down between the boardroom and the frontline.
Structured methods for helping leaders let go of habits that built yesterday's success.
Replacing framework vocabulary with the language that actually moves leadership decisions.
Practical questions and signals that reveal misalignment before it becomes failure.
Building the upward feedback loop that tells leadership whether strategy actually landed.
This path is taught immersively, in cohort groups — leaders working through real organizational alignment problems together, not absorbing slides alone. It's one of twelve ADAPT© Learning Paths built around outcomes, not frameworks.
Start with a free 30-minute Capability Readiness Review — no sales pitch, just a clear, honest read on where your organization stands.