Built for Change: Enterprise Agility Isn’t Optional Anymore

Manifesto for Enterprise Agility -- abstract stacked shapes on a dark purple background

PMI and Agile Alliance are pleased to unveil the “Manifesto for Enterprise Agility,” a leadership guide for organizations facing frequent disruption and rising pressure to reinvent.


In PMI’s global C-suite research, reinvention is the norm: 93% of senior executives say they must rethink and challenge assumptions of their operating models or business approaches at least every five years, and nearly 65% say they are doing so every two years or faster. The challenge is not recognizing change and the need to adapt faster; it’s converting strategy into action.

That strategy-execution gap is where enterprise agility becomes essential – but where ambition still outpaces reality. While 85% of C-suite executives recognize enterprise agility as critical and very important, 65% admit they implemented it to a limited extent or not at all.

“Enterprise agility is the capacity to adapt at scale without losing coherence – to decide quickly, redirect resources deliberately, and keep strategy actionable under real-world pressure,” said Pierre Le Manh, President and Chief Executive Officer of PMI. “Enterprise agility is a non-negotiable for organizations to remain relevant and leverage constant change to thrive and create value.”

Inside the Manifesto for Enterprise Agility

Launched in the 25th anniversary year of the Manifesto for Agile Software Development, the Manifesto for Enterprise Agility moves agility beyond teams and projects to the entire enterprise — including leadership behavior, operating models, governance, and culture.

Rather than prescribing a framework, the Manifesto focuses on how leaders build and run the system for enterprise-level agility – governing with guardrails instead of gatekeepers, funding intent instead of activity, and moving authority closer to where value is created.

The Manifesto is anchored in four values:

  • Clear purpose realized through adaptive plans: Guiding with purpose and adjusting along the way outweighs over-planning and the illusion of control.
  • Shared enterprise outcomes over functional optimization: Prioritizing long-term goals and cross-enterprise collaboration outweighs optimizing for short-term, departmental KPIs.
  • Continuous reinvention over preservation: Boldly challenging established operating models, and innovation outweighs structural inertia and preservation of the status quo.
  • Human-centricity amidst change: Continuous learning, developing resilience, enabling autonomy, and leading with empathy and trust outweigh leading change by process only.

The Manifesto for Enterprise Agility is for organizations that need to adapt faster, stay aligned, and keep strategy actionable. The principles guide executives and practitioners in operationalizing the values and offer leaders the clarity to act on what really matters.

Endorsers of the Manifesto describe why that matters now

Greg Beato, co-author of Superagency
“Twenty-five years after the Manifesto for Agile Software Development presented a new way to think about software development, it’s time to apply similar thinking to enterprises as a whole, not just to projects or products. Just as the Agile Manifesto was a response to a major change in technological conditions driven by the internet, the growth in both physical and digital networks around the world compels enterprises to incorporate and deploy agility to their entire organizational systems, including leadership, operating models, execution governance, and culture.”

Kevin Nolan, CEO of GE Appliances
“Today’s business landscape demands rapid adaptation and greater agility. Agile organizations adapt faster and take the lead, while those not embracing agility risk falling behind as collaboration becomes essential in a dynamic environment.”

Sagar Kochlar, CEO of Rebel Foods
“Enterprise agility is less about frameworks and more about leadership courage – the courage to reset the vision, dismantle legacy assumptions, and trust teams to execute within systems designed for speed. This Manifesto captures a critical truth: enterprise agility is not a transformation initiative, but a leadership mindset required to continuously reinvent vision, structure, and execution in a volatile world.”

The Manifesto is grounded in research

The Manifesto is grounded in PMI research, including global C‑suite surveys, executive interviews, and input from senior transformation practitioners, reflecting the realities leaders face across industries.

Read the full Manifesto for Enterprise Agility here.

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