Explores why Scrum Masters need authority, not just influence, to enforce Agile practices, remove blockers, and ensure teams follow Scrum for true organisational agility.
The idea that Scrum Masters should lead only through influence sounds noble—but in many organisations, it’s also naive.
Influence works when teams and leadership are already aligned. But what happens when they’re not? When teams reject Agile principles, leadership prioritises control over agility, or dysfunction is deeply embedded?
At some point, persuasion isn’t enough. A Scrum Master must be able to remove blockers, challenge bad practices, and uphold Scrum—not just suggest improvements and hope for the best.
If your Scrum Master has no authority to enforce the framework, to say “No, we don’t work like that,” or to hold teams accountable, what’s the point?
Scrum isn’t about soft influence. It’s about creating real, sustainable agility. That requires leadership backed by action, not just good intentions.
Where does your organisation stand on this?
If you've made it this far, it's worth connecting with our principal consultant and coach, Martin Hinshelwood, for a 30-minute 'ask me anything' call.
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Illumina
Ericson
YearUp.org
Flowmaster (a Mentor Graphics Company)
DFDS
Boeing
Higher Education Statistics Agency
Jack Links
Cognizant Microsoft Business Group (MBG)
Freadom
Microsoft
Philips
Slicedbread
MacDonald Humfrey (Automation) Ltd.
Capita Secure Information Solutions Ltd
Milliman
Big Data for Humans
NIT A/S
Royal Air Force
Ghana Police Service
Nottingham County Council
Washington Department of Enterprise Services
Washington Department of Transport
New Hampshire Supreme Court
Boeing
Cognizant Microsoft Business Group (MBG)
Lean SA
Illumina
YearUp.org
Sage