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Showing posts from March, 2018

Agile Sports Artifacts - Post Game Surveys

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Following each game, the players, coaches, assistant coaches and analyst take a post-game survey, which captures the mood of the team and its on court effectiveness. Post-game surveys consists of five questions covering the following topics: Game Plan, Team Synergy, Defensive Support, Strategy Execution and Value Creation. Results of the surveys are displayed in the reporting section of the Sprint Performance Dashboard and can be used to create parallels between strategies and team synergy. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports - Scouting Reports

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Scouting reports are a keystone of the team’s game strategy and player acquisition strategy. In the Agile Sports Framework™, the assistant coaches are responsible for evaluating opponent performance and providing pre-game scouting reports for the games within the Sprint. Pre-game scouting reports help the coach plan the team strategy for the upcoming Sprint. In addition to the pre-game scouting reports, there are also player scouting reports which are provided by the scout team. Scouts are responsible for evaluating elite players across the globe on their strengths, weaknesses and ability to add value to the team, based on data and observation. At the end of each Sprint the coaching staff deliver Sprint Scouting Reports that identify players that fit the team’s identity, their priority rankings, the areas where they can add value to the team and its mission, and which of these player’s rights will soon be available through free agency or trade. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Artifacts - Team Value Cards

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Team Value Cards are like Player Value Cards, but include metrics which the team as a group commits to achieving during each sprint. Team Value Cards measure the team’s planned and actual values and are the inputs for the Player Value Cards. Together they drive team goals and maximize player value. Team Value Cards is like fantasy sports for the team, where they earn value points based on their actual performance. Each sprint the team can review and adjust their Team Value Card, which is provided by the lead analyst. Team Value Cards play into inspect, adapt, and self-organize functionality. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Artifacts - Player Value Cards

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The Agile Sports Framework™ provides a simple way for players to plan and achieve sprint goals and overall team goals through Player Value Cards. Player Value Cards are each player’s list of the metrics (along with their value) the lead analyst deems as important toward achieving the Sprint Goal. Think of Player Value Cards as a menu for players, where they have a budget and must select a number of items, or metrics whose total value equals or exceeds the budget, or Planned Value. Player Value Cards is like fantasy sports for the athletes, where they earn value points based on their actual performance. Each sprint the player can review and adjust their Player Value Card, which is provided by the lead analyst. Player Value Cards represent each player’s individual plan for helping the team achieve its Sprint Goals. Player Value Cards play into inspect, adapt, and self-organize functionality. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Artifacts - The Sprint Performance Dashboard

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In Agile Sports, the Sprint Performance Dashboard is an ordered list of all of the metrics in the Performance Metrics Log identified by the lead analyst to be included in the upcoming Sprint. The lead analyst is the owner of the Sprint Performance Dashboard and translates team goals and objectives into key performance metrics. The lead analyst assigns a value to each performance metric (see Estimating Player “Value” toward Team Goals and Tracking Velocity). The lead analyst also provides the Recommended Team Values for the team and players to strive for as their Sprint Goal. The Sprint Performance Dashboard is a continuous work in progress. The first iterations of the Sprint Performance Dashboard lays out the initial baseline of metrics. The Sprint Performance Dashboard evolves as the players and team performance evolves and as new metrics are identified. The Sprint Performance Dashboard is constantly changing as the lead analyst assesses what the most valuable performance metrics http...

Agile Sports Artifacts - The Sprint Performance Plan

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In Agile Sports, the Sprint Performance Plan is the set of Sprint Performance Dashboard metrics selected for the Sprint, plus the Sprint Strategy for realizing the team’s Sprint Goal. The Sprint Performance Plan is a forecast by the players about what metrics will be achieved and the strategy to achieve those goals and deliver a successful Sprint. The coach is responsible for providing the Sprint Strategy for both the team and the players. The Sprint Performance Plan adds transparency to the team and player game plans and the performance results necessary to reach Sprint Goals. The Sprint Performance Plan provides enough detail to clarify what each player and what the team as a whole is expected to deliver. Progress towards the Sprint Performance Plan is discussed during the Post-Game Meetings. Players submit their Player Value Cards before the Sprint, the team crafts its strategy, and the Sprint Performance Plan is created. This plan becomes more precise each Sprint. http://www.agiles...

Agile Sports Artifacts

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Agile Sports artifacts are the products and tools that provide transparency of data and opportunities for inspection, adaptation, self-organization and synergy. The artifacts that drive the Agile Sports Framework™ are designed to maintain data transparency, so that everyone in the organization has a common understanding of what the data means. This ensures that management decisions and player value is optimized. The Agile Sports Analytics Application, developed by Victor Holman, supports the artifacts that drive the Agile Sports Framework™. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports - Game Management

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Game management is key for any team’s success. The ability to know when to make substitutions, call time outs, foul, etc. can be the difference between regaining control of momentum and being the victim of a 15+ point or 2+ goal run. The coach is responsible for managing the game plan. In an Agile Sports organization, the coach leverages player feedback and analytics to craft and gain buy-in to strategy. The assistant coaches are responsible for creating advanced scouting reports for upcoming games and offering the coach suggestions during the game based on that advance scouting. Assistant coaches are responsible for tracking data during the game, which, combined with an analytic or stat tool can provide key insight for the coaching staff, and provide real time decisions. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Artifacts - The Performance Metrics Log

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In Agile Sports, the Performance Metrics Log is a prioritized list of team and player metrics created by the lead analyst, which reflects input from past data and performance, and stakeholders (such as the owner, GM, and fans through polls). Inputs include organizational goals and objectives, past Sprint performance data and any new metrics identified during the Sprint Review and Sprint Retrospective. The Performance Metric Log is the key input to the Sprint Performance Dashboard. As the team gets a better understanding of how metrics impact the game and add value towards reaching player and team goals, the lead analyst is able to assign more accurate metric values and Recommended Team Values for upcoming http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Events - The Sprint Retrospective

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The Sprint Retrospective is a three hour meeting, which follows the Sprint Review Meeting and precedes the upcoming Sprint Planning Session (preferably the first day off). The Sprint Retrospective allows the team to inspect its performance and make adjustments for the next Sprint. The Agile Sports Consultant ensures that the Sprint Retrospective takes place and that attendees are clear on the objective of the meeting. The Agile Sports Consultant teaches the team to manage the meeting within the time frame. The Agile Sports Consultant is a participant in this meeting and provides oversight for the Agile Sports process. The purpose of the Sprint Retrospective is to: • Inspect the previous Sprint and evaluate its efficiency and effectiveness in terms of player collaboration, self-organization, goal attainment, and wins; • Identify and order the performance targets that were hit and missed, and potential improvements; and, • Identify any obstacles or challenges that may keep the t http://w...

Agile Sports Events - The Sprint Review Meeting

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In AgileSprint Review Meetings are held at the completion of each Sprint. The purpose of the meeting is to inspect the results of the Sprint and adapt the Sprint Performance Dashboard metrics and value for next Sprint, if needed. During the Sprint Review Meeting, the team and invited attendees discuss what they achieved during the Sprint, what they need to improve upon in the upcoming Sprint and any obstacles or challenges that may keep the team from meeting its overall objectives. Based on this collaboration, as well as any changes to the Sprint Performance Dashboard during the Sprint, the team determines the next metrics that need to be incorporated to the upcoming Sprint to optimize performance and produce wins. This is an informal meeting and the purpose is to gather feedback and foster transparency among the team. The Sprint Review Meeting is a four-hour meeting following each Sprint. The Agile Sports Consultant ensures that the Sprint Review Meeting takes place and that http://ww...

Agile Sports Events - The Post Game Meeting

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The Post-Game Meeting is a 15-minute event for the players to reflect on the game and create/validate their plan for the next game. This allows the team to decide if the adjustments made from the previous game were effective. The Post-Game Meeting is held at consistent times (such as immediately following the game) to reduce complexity and promote consistency). During the meeting, the players review the stat sheets as they compare to their individual and team goals (planned value) and they make self and team assessments on the following: • How did I perform this game against my assigned metrics? • What areas I’ll improve on next game? • What obstacles may jeopardize team from meeting our Sprint Goal? The Post-Game Meeting allows the team to inspect the impact of the previous game’s adjustments as well as make adjustments if progress is deviating away from the Sprint Goal. The Post-Game Meeting increases the probability that the players and team as a whole maintain buy-in to http://www....

Agile Sports - The Sprint Goal

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In Agile Sports, the Sprint Goal is a set of metrics for the Sprint that the individual players and the team as a whole can meet to achieve its planned outcome (wins-losses & total value). It provides clarification into how reaching the goals of the Sprint contribute to the overall team goal. The Sprint Goals are identified during the Sprint Planning Session meeting. The player’s planned value, the team’s planned value & the projected wins/losses comprise the Sprint Goal. The Sprint Goals become the set of objectives that encourage the players to work together to achieve team goals. When the team deviates from its overall goal, the coach makes adjustments to strategy & team analyst re-evaluates metric values in the upcoming Sprint. During practices and games, players keep the Sprint Goal in mind. If unplanned events cause a player or players to not be able to achieve their Sprint objectives (such as injury, suspension, major slump, trade), they collaborate among themselves ...

Agile Sports Events - The Sprint Planning Session

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In Agile Sports, the metrics to be achieved during the Sprint is determined at the Sprint Planning Session. The Sprint Plan is a collaborative work among the lead analyst, coaching staff and players. Sprint Planning Sessions are limited to a maximum of eight hours for a ten game Sprint. The majority of that time is dedicated to the coaching staff and analyst inspecting and making adjustments from the previous Sprint. The Agile Sports Consultant ensures that the Sprint Planning Session takes place and that everybody understands its purpose. The Agile Sports Consultant teaches the team to keep the session within the eight hour time frame. Sprint Planning Sessions answer the following: • What areas can we improve and which goals can we reach in the upcoming Sprint? • How will the players deliver the desired results? • What will the team need to do in order to achieve its Sprint Goals? http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Events - The Sprint

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In Agile Sports, the core of the Agile Sports Framework™ is a Sprint, an incremental schedule of typically 5 or 10 games during which a set of specific target metrics and goals are planned and accomplished. It is recommended that each of the Sprints have a consistent number of games to ensure consistency when measuring progress and effectiveness of various strategies and game plans implemented throughout the season. When the Sprint is completed, the next Sprint begins immediately. Sprints contain and include the Sprint Planning Session, the scheduled games, the Post-Game Meetings, the Sprint Review Meeting, and the Sprint Retrospective. During the Sprint the following rules apply: • Adjustments cannot be made to the Sprint Performance Dashboard that keeps team from reaching the Sprint Goal, • Existing performance benchmarks do not decrease, and, • Players can change the metrics they plan to achieve as long as it does not decrease their planned value, • Goals may be re-nego http://www.a...

Agile Sports Events

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In Agile Sports, prescribed events are used in the Agile Sports Framework™ to create consistency and to maximize team performance throughout each Sprint as the team strives to reach its overall goal. All events have a maximum time frame and must be completed within that time to avoid distraction from day to day operations and activities. Aside from the Sprint, which comprises of the other Agile Sports Events (The Sprint, Sprint Planning Session, Sprint Review Meeting, Sprint Retrospective and Post Game Meetings), each event in Agile Sports serves the purpose of increasing transparency, promoting inspection and self-organization, and building synergy. Failing to deliver on any of these events throughout the process can result in undesirable performance. The Agile Sports Analytics Software, developed by Victor Holman, supports the events that drive Agile Sports. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Roles - The Agile Sports Consultant

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The Agile Sports Consultant is responsible for ensuring the Agile Sports Framework™ is understood and executed successfully. Agile Sports Consultants do this by providing feedback and recommendations to ensure that the team adheres to Agile Sports principles, processes, and rules. The Agile Sports Consultant is a passive-leader for the organization who helps stakeholders understand how to effectively communicate with the players how they can maximize value and performance. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Roles - The Scouts

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In Agile Sports, the job of a scout is to evaluate players on their strengths, weaknesses and ability to add value to the team. The ultimate goal of scouts is to identify the players who can add the greatest contribution to achieving the team’s goals. Scouts deliver reports that identify these players and their availability status (free agency or trade). Through Agile Sports, a scout can persuade a player to join the team because the data and analytics supports the value they can add to achieving the team’s goals. Scouts are team ambassadors and are responsible for creating relationships with players around the league, specifically players who can buy into the team’s Agile Sports philosophy and help the team achieve its goal. Scouts must have a keen eye for identifying and rating players in their league, developmental league, international leagues, college and high school whose style is consistent with the team identity. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Roles - The Assistant Coach

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In Agile Sports, assistant coaches help the players develop their skills and knowledge of the game. They share their experience with the players, and help the players reach their Sprint target metrics and maximize their value. The key role of assistant coaches is to make sure player IQs are growing, and that the players are developing synergy. Ideal assistant coaches are former coaches or players with deep understanding of spatial data, improving offensive and defensive efficiency, and teaching players how to react off the ball or puck. They have a track record for promoting ball movement, player movement and team synergy, in addition to exploiting analytics from spatial data. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Roles - The General Manager

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General Managers oversee the business and financial operations of the team, thus making it critical that the GM, architect and lead analyst share common strategy for helping the team achieve its goals. The lead analyst is responsible for prioritizing the needs and performance goals of the team. The architect is responsible for recommending the players that best fill the unmet needs or goals identified by the lead analyst. The General Manager can be the architect. The General Manager takes the feedback received from the lead analyst, scouts and architect during each Sprint Review Meeting, and integrates feedback into the decision making process. GMs also have an important public relations role. They oversee the day-to-day operations and short-and long-term strategic planning. Effective GMs surround themselves with a rounded staff capable of making sure they have all the information necessary to make a decision. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Roles - The Architect

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In Agile Sports, team architecture is a key source of success and risk, and the architect is responsible for ensuring the team is built around players that complement each other, fit the team identity and can build and sustain value. The architect is the person who owns the personnel decisions for the team and who facilitates the creation and evolution of the overall team identity. Some owners are more closely involved in player personnel decisions, while others leave these decisions to the architect, GM, scouts and assistant coaches. The architect can be the owner, however the rule of empiricism and analytics within the Agile Sports Framework™ suggest that the decision maker(s) for player personnel be an expert in the sport, an analytics guru and able to map player acquisitions (drafts and free agents) to the performance needs and goals defined by the lead analyst. For non-professional teams, the architect is the coach. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Roles - The Coach

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In Agile Sports, the coach is the team decision maker and works closely with the lead analyst. While this role functions much like a traditional coach, the self-organizing principles of Agile Sports open up the possibilities of utilizing a player-coach for this role. Players such as Lebron James, Russell Westbrook, Tom Brady, Aaron Rogers, Connor McDavid and Sidney Crosby are a few who possess the qualities to possibly fulfill the dual function of player/coach. The coach’s job is to guide the team toward synergy, where all players are working together on both sides of the court, field or ice, delivering the value they commit to during Sprint Planning (see Estimating Player “Value” toward Team Goals to learn more about measuring value). The coach guides the team in executing the game plan and adjusting the strategy as necessary to win games. They are the leader in team conversations and validating that all team members have total buy-in into the team’s strategy. http://www.agilesportsan...

Agile Sports Analytics – Where Agile Management and Sports Come Together

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At the end of each Sprint, the team looks at the performance goals reached & adds up the number of value points associated w those achieved metrics. The total number of value points gained is the team’s velocity, or production, for that Sprint. After the first few Sprints, the Analyst will start to see a trend & will be able to calculate the average velocity. The value point system will allow players to track progress with a single number, & it encourages them to aim for more key metrics in an effort to accumulate value points in the Sprint & gain velocity. Players see their value based on points accumulated by hitting performance targets rather than scoring points. The average velocity is the total number of value points gained, divided by the total number of Sprints completed. For example, if the team’s velocity was… Sprint 1 = 120 value points Sprint 2 = 125 value points Sprint 3 = 170 value points Sprint 4 = 135 value points the total value is 550. Average velocity ...

Agile Sports Roles - The Players

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In Agile Sports, the players consist of the athletes who deliver the organization’s product on the court. They are the individuals responsible for setting and meeting their Sprint Goals and executing their roles which contribute to the team’s overall objective. Through their planned Player Value Cards players can manage their game plan on how they will add value and help achieve team goals (see Player Value Cards for more details). With the assistance of the lead analyst and/or coaching staff, the players use data to identify how they can add value and contribute to each game. Provided the metrics are valued correctly, the player’s and team’s overall efficiency and effectiveness will be optimized. Players also provide recommendations to the lead analyst into areas they believe data could be organized to help them play with more synergy. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Roles - The Lead Analyst

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The lead analyst is responsible for maximizing the results on the court through analytics and shaping the goals of the Sprint, as well as the overall objectives. In Agile Sports, the lead analyst is the head decision-maker in the data/analytics team. The lead analyst is responsible for team data, the interpretation of data, and reporting performance. This person translates the needs and goals of the team to the player’s performance. The lead analyst clarifies any details regarding the team’s focus and areas for improvement, and is responsible for maintaining a dashboard that lists and prioritizes the target metrics and goals, and recommends the planned value for each Sprint. It’s the lead analysts’ responsibility to analyze what metrics and strategies drive organizational success and constantly search for new ways of interpreting data, so that players can understand it, and most important identify new ways of adding value to the team. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Transitioning From Traditional Analytics to Agile Sports Analytics

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When you adopt a new approach and process for managing an organization, there will be obstacles. For one, there’s a learning curve that the organization must overcome. In addition, there will be push back from some players and other organizational staff. Organizations that decide to adopt the principles of the Agile Sports Framework™ must invest in training key team members and educating stakeholders. Agile Sports Framework™ requires that the organization accept some changes in roles and processes. It is critical that all team members, including coaches and analysts receive the proper Agile Sports Framework™ training and that management commits to ongoing training to reinforce Agile Sports values, until they become part of the organization’s culture. This ensures that everybody is on board, understands the new process and most important, understands their role and responsibilities. Agile Sports training, in combination with hiring an Agile Sports consultant to oversee the transition ht...

Estimating Player Value Toward Team Goals in Agile Sports

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In Agile Sports, when a lead analyst sets the key objectives of a sprint, they prioritize the performance metrics (in the Sprint Performance Dashboard), assess the complexity of each metric based on the schedule and individual matchups within the Sprint, and assigns a value to them. Value for performance metrics vary from Sprint to Sprint & player to player based on the competition of the schedule & what the team needs him to do. This assesses the feasibility of each metric & forces players to challenge themselves in other areas when goals related to their strengths and skillsets are difficult to accomplish (for example, in basketball the chances of winning the matchup of scoring or rebounding against a guard like Russell Westbrook is low, therefore the guard in that matchup is forced to find other performance metrics they will win in that matchup, thus creating value). It’s very important that the entire team share a clearly defined & common understanding of the value ...

Agile Sports - Monitoring Progress Towards Team Goals

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At any point in the season, the team’s actual performance can be compared to their projected performance to determine how the team is progressing towards their goal. The lead analyst tracks this progress at least every Sprint Review Meeting, using tools such as burndown charts. The outstanding key metrics to achieve (or performance backlog) is displayed on the vertical axis, with time along the horizontal The lead analyst compares Player Planned Value and Team Planned Value to the actual value they delivered in order to assess progress toward achieving their goal. This information is transparent to the organization. Trending methods and tools can be used to forecast progress. But the best results are yielded from strategies based on known outcomes, and understanding what is necessary for the team to win games. In long seasons where countless variables exist only known outcomes may be used for predicting Sprint performance and fine tuning metric value. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.co...

The Roles of an Agile Sports Team

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The key members of the Agile Sports Framework™ are the lead analyst, coaches, players, and the Agile Sports Consultant. Secondary roles include the owner, architect, General Manager, front office, scouts, event staff, fans and other stakeholders. Players are self-organizing and versatile (cover a wide range of skill sets and attributes). Self-organizing teams determine the best way to accomplish their goals, with direction from the coaching staff. The continuous improvement model in Agile Sports is designed to maximize value, performance and synergy. In Agile Sports teams execute their plans and improve performance incrementally. This allows them to evaluate (inspect) and make adjustments (adapt) frequently, and increase their chances of staying on track and meeting team objectives. The Agile Sports Analytics Application, developed by Victor Holman, supports the roles that drive Agile Sports. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Framework - The Synergy Pillar

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Synergy is the state that every team should strive to reach and maintain. Synergy is the collective ability for all team members to be able to interpret in real time the opponents’ game plan and know exactly how each team member will react, based on the team philosophy and game situation. Synergy occurs when a team learns which strategies are most effective for their unique makeup and how to work as a single unit to achieve the team goals. The Agile Sports Framework™ helps teams identify these strategies and achieve synergy faster. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Framework - The Self-Organization Pillar

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Self-organization is a fundamental concept in Agile Sports. Self-organization does not mean that players instead of managers control the team strategy and execution. Nor does it mean letting players do whatever they want to do. It means that management commits to guiding the evolution towards synergy, which emerges from the interaction of players, committed to team goals and learning through inspection, adaptation, self-organization and empiricism. The coach clarifies to players what the team objectives are for each 5 or 10 Game Sprint, and players (along with the lead analyst and assistant coach’s guidance) determine how they will add value. But they are nonetheless self-organizing, with influence from those who can assist them in achieving the team goal (such as analyst creating ways of measuring value and the coach adopting new offensive/defensive strategies). The player’s job is to self-organize around team challenges, boundaries, and constraints identified by the lead analyst.. ht...

Agile Sports Framework - The Adaptation Pillar

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If the lead analyst determines that one or more areas of the team or player’s goals deviate outside acceptable limits (defined at the beginning of the process), and the resulting performance is unacceptable, the strategy must be adjusted. An adjustment must be made immediately to minimize goal and value deviation. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Monitoring Team Progress In Agile Sports

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Monitoring team progress is one of the cornerstones of the inspection, adaption, self-organization and synergy pillars. This section outlines the Agile Sports process for monitoring team progress. Monitoring Sprint Progress During Sprints, team and player performance and value can be compared to their projected performance in the Sprint Strategy. The lead analyst tracks performance and players assess their actual value every Post-Game Meeting to project the chances of achieving their Sprint Goals. By tracking performance throughout the Sprint, the team can manage their progress and make adjustments to ensure that they are on track and deliver the value necessary to win games and contribute to the team goal. The Agile Sports Analytics Application, developed by Victor Holman, measures team progress toward achieving Sprint Goals. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Framework - The Inspection Pillar

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The team must frequently inspect their performance analytics and progress toward their Sprint Goals and overall goal to detect performance variances. Inspections should be frequent and performed by the lead analyst. Inspections are most beneficial when performed regularly and decisions are based on a combination of analytics and expert judgment. The body of work for inspection should be at least one Sprint. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports Framework - The Transparency Pillar

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All artifacts and events of the Agile Sports process must be visible to the players and coaching staff, who are responsible for delivering the outcome on the court. Transparency requires that the definition and value of metrics be clear, as well as a definition of their successful execution. For example: • A common language of what constitutes value must be shared by all participants; and, • All stakeholders must understand the definition of success. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Defining “Success” in Agile Sports

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In Agile Sports, when a Sprint Performance Dashboard metric or goal is described as “successful”, there must be a consensus on what success means. Everyone in the organization must buy into that shared definition of success, in order to ensure transparency. This definition of success is used to assess Sprint Goals and validate that the team is on pace to reach its overall goal. The same definition guides the team in knowing which Sprint Performance Dashboard metrics it can commit to during Sprint Planning Sessions. The ultimate goal of each Sprint is to deliver wins & performance results that can be defined as successful. Players produce performance goals for each Sprint. Each Sprint Increment is added to previous Increments during that season, & thoroughly assessed & reviewed (during Sprint Reviews & Retrospectives), ensuring a successful season once completed. As teams mature, their definition of success will become clearer & will include more strict criteria for ...

Agile Sports Framework - The Data Pillar

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The core of Agile Sports’ adaptation and decision making process is data and analytics. The organization must fully commit to discovering new ways of interpreting data and creating value. Value refers to measurable results as they contribute to and/or impact the overall goals of the team. Value is discovered through empiricism and evolutionary analytics performed and inspected incrementally. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

6 Pillars of the Agile Sports Framework

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There are six pillars that form the foundation of the Agile Sports Framework™ as team data is transformed into action on the court, field or ice: Data Transparency Inspection Adaptation Self-Organization Synergy. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

The Importance of Transparency in Agile Sports

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Agile Sports relies on transparency in order for the team to succeed. Transparency in the data, transparency in the player’s feedback, transparency in the team goals and transparency in the outcomes. Decisions to optimize value, make personnel decisions and craft a strategy are dependent on the quality and transparency of the data that the team collects and analyzes. If transparency is achieved, decisions can be based on quantitative analysis. If the data and analysis are not transparent, the resulting decisions will be poor, value and performance will diminish, and team winning may be compromised. The Agile Sports Consultant works with the lead analyst, the team and management to ensure the artifacts are clear and understood by all stakeholders. It’s the Agile Sports Consultant’s job to detect transparency issues by inspecting the artifacts, seeking out trends, paying attention to feedback, and highlighting deltas between planned and actual results. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Benefits of Adopting the Agile Sports Philosophy for Your Team

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Teams following the Agile Sports Framework™ can expect to: • Adapt a higher quality style of play: High performance is achieved through techniques such as real time analytics, continuous improvement, iterative adaptation, team synergy. • Gain knowledge through empiricism: Increased knowledge comes from focusing more on high-value performance measurement, aligning player goals to team needs, improved decision making, self-organization, and knowledge and improvement through empiricism. • Provide greater fan satisfaction: Greater fan satisfaction is achieved by exciting game play and continuous improvement. • Deliver results quicker: Goals are reached faster through data, transparency, inspection, adaptation, self-organization and synergy. • Increase team IQ: Increased sports IQ and player value through player value cards, performance dashboards and self-organization. • Maximize value: Forces players to find ways they can add value and forces teams to increase value on a Sprint to S http:...

Agile Sports - The Sprint Schedule

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In Agile Sports, the Sprint Schedule captures all of the games and activities during the sprint. In the Agile Sports Analytics Application the following activities and deadlines are captured in the Sprint Schedule: • Game dates, opponents and times • Sprint Review/Retrospective meetings (typically on the first non-game day following previous sprint) • Sprint Planning meetings (typically on the first non-game day following previous sprint) • Submitting Player Value Cards and Team Value Cards (the day of the last game of the previous sprint) • Submitting Post Game Surveys (following each game of the sprint) • Submitting Post Game Review Notes (following each game of the sprint) • Submitting the Sprint Strategy (the day following the last game of the previous sprint) http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

What is Agile Sports?

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Agile Sports employs an iterative, incremental approach to optimize performance and adapt quickly to change. The concepts of agile sports are described throughout this guide. Complete buy-in to philosophy, team strategy and game plan coupled with commitment to continuously gain a deeper understanding of how to measure team and player value through analytics are key fundamentals to this process. Through the Agile Sports Framework™ teams will come to value: • Team goals and accountability over personal achievements • Intuitiveness and sports IQ over set plays and coaching • Continuous improvement over quick fixes through trades • Incremental adaptation over long term plans • Analytics and empiricism over expert judgement • Discovering new metrics over traditional statistics The rules of the Agile Sports Framework™ integrates the pillars, roles, events, and artifacts guiding the relationships and interactions between them. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

10 Principles That Drive Agile Sports

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1. The highest priority is to reach organizational goals through team synergy and collective team IQ. 2. Every member of the organization must know exactly how their role contributes to the Sprint Goals. 3. Foster openness, honesty and transparency in player feedback and team analysis. 4. All organization members have buy in and accountability toward reaching team goals. 5. Players work together to determine how they will reach team goals and ensure each player understands how their value contributes to the team’s goals. 6. Iterative processes control promotes continuous improvement and added value. 7. Synergy and continuous improvement are enhanced through analytics. 8. The best results and team performance comes from self-organizing teams. 9. After each Sprint the team reflects on how to become more effective, from the players to the assistant coaches to the analysts. 10. Empiricism is achieved through a balance of veteran coaches, known outcomes and lessons learned from th http://ww...

Challenges Agile Sports Analytics Resolves - Agile Sports

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Challenges that the Agile Sports Framework™ helps teams resolve include the following: • The culture to constantly hire new coaches expecting different results • Lack of player discipline or buy-in to coach’s strategy • Staff (player) turnover from discontent or greed • Inability to accurately measure player value based on intangibles • Lack of clarity/transparency of goals • Lack of team identity and understanding how each player encompasses that identity • Adapting to change (trades, injuries, firings, etc.) • Lack of ball or puck movement and court, field or ice spacing • Lack of investment to teaching players analytics and sports IQ http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Agile Sports - Burndown Charts

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In Agile Sports, burndown charts are used for tracking progress toward achieving the key performance metrics identified by the lead analyst in the Performance Metrics Log. Burn down charts are graphical representations of team performance metrics left to achieve versus the schedule. The outstanding key metrics to achieve (or backlog) is often on the vertical axis, with time along the horizontal axis. The definition for successfully achieving a key metric must be understood by all stakeholders. Remember, the metrics in the Performance Metrics Log are key metrics that the lead analyst identified as critical for achieving synergy and reaching team goals. Burndown charts allow the team to predict when they will be playing at the level needed to achieve their season goals. Burndown Charts are part of the inspect and adapt functionality. http://www.agilesportsanalytics.com

Purpose of the Agile Sports Framework™

There’s a saying, “what gets measured gets done”. This concept can be validated by simply asking anybody who has held a job and goes through an annual review process. The human brain is wired to achieve once we are able to create clear, measurable goals and a plan for reaching them. If teams can successfully identify metrics that capture the intangible attributes that drive team success, and present it in a format where players can clearly understand and decide what they can do to create value, then a shift from the individual mentality to the team first mentality will occur, and teams will achieve synergy. Synergy is the interaction or cooperation of the players to deliver a combined value greater than the sum of their separate value. Synergy is the state that every team should strive to reach and maintain. Agile Sports helps teams identify these strategies and achieve synergy faster. Agile Sports provides a framework that every team can apply to their existing analytic program http:/...

About Victor Holman, The Founder of Agile Sports Analytics

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Victor Holman is a business performance expert, management consultant, speaker, and author. His thought leadership in business performance, organizational performance and process improvement has been demonstrated in books, frameworks and products he’s published over the last 20 years. Victor has served as a performance expert, project manager and management consultant to over 50 government agencies worldwide and a hundred corporations of all sizes. He’s been featured in major television, radio and print media outlets for his ability to help small businesses outperform their competition by applying strategies, frameworks and management tools that work for large, successful businesses. Victor’s Holman's true passion however, is sports and his love for analytics. The Agile Sports Framework™ and processes are an adaptation based on the performance management and systems development frameworks Victor has implemented and lessons he has learned over the years as a consultant. http://www.a...