Agile for ID: Moving at Leaning Speed

Workflow Model

Use: Workflow / Process / Strategy

Best for: Fast-moving projects, iterative design

Related Concepts: MVP, Sprint, Rapid Prototyping

Instructional design is not just about timelines and templates. It is about people, and how we meet their needs quickly, flexibly, and with intention.

That is where Agile comes in.

Originally created for software development, Agile is not just a project management buzzword. It is a mindset—a way of thinking about work that prioritizes collaboration, speed, and constant improvement. Agile has become increasingly valuable for instructional designers who are building learning in fast-changing environments.

Whether you are supporting a sales team that is constantly evolving or launching just-in-time training for new technology, Agile can help you design smarter, faster, and better.

In this post, we will explore what Agile really means in an instructional design context, how it can enhance your workflow, and some strategies and scenarios that bring it to life.

What Is Agile for IDs (not Developers)

At its core, Agile is an iterative approach to getting work done. Instead of spending months building a full course from start to finish, Agile teams break projects into smaller, manageable chunks called sprints. These sprints typically last one to three weeks and allow for continuous feedback and adjustments along the way.

For instructional designers, Agile means:

You do not have to be a certified Scrum Master to use Agile. You just need a willingness to work iteratively, be transparent about progress, and welcome feedback before the course is considered “done.”

Reflection Question

Are you waiting until something feels finished before you share it, or could earlier feedback help you improve faster?

Why Agile Works for Instructional Design

Agile is not a replacement for instructional design models like ADDIE. It is a complement. Think of ADDIE as your foundation, and Agile as your way of working within it.

Here is how Agile helps:

When Agile Might Not Be the Right Fit

While Agile is powerful, it is not always the best approach. Some projects are better suited to more traditional models. Agile might not be the right fit if:

In these cases, using a simplified version of ADDIE or a waterfall-style plan might offer the structure and predictability your project needs.

 

Quick Tips for Applying Agile to Your Process

Create a Minimum Viable Product (MVP)

Build a first version with just enough content and interaction to be useful. Then refine it based on feedback. This MVP should follow proper grammar and punctuation, along with brand or style guidelines as applicable.

Break your learning solution into sprints

Focus on one module, course or modality at a time. Prioritize based on learner need and business value.

Schedule feedback loops

Build in regular reviews with SMEs and test learners. Set expectations that feedback is part of the process.

Collaborate across roles

Involve developers, graphic designers, and project leads from the beginning to avoid late-stage surprises.

Reflection Question

Which of these strategies could improve your current workflow, and what would be the easiest one to try first?

Examples of Practical Scenarios

Scenario 1: Rapid Training for a New Tool Rollout

A company is introducing a new software tool to hundreds of employees. Instead of building a full course upfront, the instructional designer creates short screencasts for top-priority tasks and gathers learner feedback. Weekly updates refine the content based on real use.

Agile principles at work:

MVP, iterative development, continuous feedback.

Scenario 2: Sales Enablement Content in Fast Cycles

Sales managers request product refreshers every time marketing releases updates. The instructional design team moves to a two-week sprint cycle where they review needs, produce content, test, and deploy—all in under ten business days.

Agile principles at work:

Sprint-based planning, stakeholder collaboration, just-in-time learning.

Scenario 3: Updating Compliance Training with SME Input

Instead of waiting for full SME sign-off, the design team schedules three SME touchpoints during content creation. Each checkpoint reviews small parts of the course, speeding up the overall timeline and improving clarity.

Agile principles at work:

Early and frequent collaboration, iterative feedback.

Final Thoughts

Agile is not about moving fast for the sake of speed. It is about staying aligned, adaptable, and learner-focused in a world where things change quickly. When you use Agile methods to build instructional content, you make space for better conversations, stronger designs, and more relevant learning.

You do not need to overhaul your entire process. Just start small. Choose one sprint, one prototype, or one feedback loop.

Because as instructional designers, we are not just delivering learning. We are co-creating experiences that evolve over time.

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