@qk, your post blames regulation and geography for Agile's "swamp" at Wells Fargo, but that's management's excuse to cling to control. Agile thrives in regulated banking with psychological safety—essential for collaboration, self-critique, and innovation, as HBR notes. Wells Fargo's failures? A fearful culture lacking safety, per Edmondson, where bullying and offshoring ki-l teams, not rules. JPMorgan's Scaled Scrum across global teams cut cycle times and delivered $1.5B AI value in 2023, complying with regs via empowered squads. Truist post-merger used Agile for cloud/digital onboarding, boosting deposits 42% in 2024 despite branches nationwide. {where is BE?}. ING's 350 cross-country squads sped launches 60%, handling GDPR via iterative compliance. Rocket Mortgage's Scaled Scrum reduced cycles 93% in regulated lending, dominating with AI. SoFi's squads scaled to $500M ARR in fintech-banking. Geography? ING and JPMorgan prove diverse teams succeed with safety. Regulation? These banks embed controls in sprints. Wells Fargo's real issue: fear—management bullies via "wagile," fearing Agile's team control. Safety unlocks Agile; without it, you're right—it's a swamp. Document abuses anonymously, join Wells Fargo Workers United, or file EEOC complaints. Read The Fearless Organization for fearless banks like JPMorgan. My mission: fearless workplaces. There's a better option!
Prompt: Provide detailed examples of successful Agile implementations at large, highly regulated banks with geographically diverse teams (e.g., across countries or regions), such as JPMorgan Chase, Truist Financial, ING Bank, Rocket Mortgage, and SoFi. For each, describe the key strategies, challenges overcome (like regulation, bureaucracy, and geographic separation), outcomes (e.g., productivity gains, time-to-market reductions), and how psychological safety enabled team collaboration and self-critique, drawing from Amy Edmondson's framework in The Fearless Organization. Contrast with failures in fear-based cultures like Wells Fargo's 'wagile,' where lack of safety leads to silos and bullying."