kanban step bystep

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Get Started with Kanbanery Justyna Pindel | Marketing & PR Manager at Kanbanery First steps

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Page 1: Kanban step bystep

Get Started with Kanbanery

Justyna Pindel | Marketing & PR Manager at Kanbanery

First steps

Page 2: Kanban step bystep

What is Kanban?The idea of the kanban board was originally used in Japan in

production processes. This method inspired the Kanban Method

which is gaining traction as a way to smoothly implement Agile and

Lean management methods in tech and non-tech companies.

Page 3: Kanban step bystep

Kanban step by step

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3 Kanban rules

Visualize your workflow

Limit Work in Progress

(WIP)

Measure, improve the flow of value

Page 5: Kanban step bystep

I. Visualize your workflow

Try out a visual representation of the process. It lets you see

exactly how tasks change from being “not done” to “done

right.” Identify a project and then the tasks required to get that

project done. There are 2 things you have to do before

visualizing your work.

Here we go!

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Step 2. Ask the right questions and find needed answersHow do things get done now?

- When do you know that something is ready to be worked on?

- Where does work come from and how do you know when it’s

done?

- What are people on the team working on now? What will they do

with those tasks when they finish them?

GOAL PLAN SUCCESS

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Yes, you do. The Kanban board can be used no matter whether you

have just a few steps (do, doing, done) or a lot of steps (to read, to read

soon, reading, read, worth to recommend). It will help you to track

progress & communicate easily with your team from anywhere in

real-time.

Do I need a work visualization?

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How vizualize work on your Kanban board?

1. First, map your workflow. Create a column for each

step. Begin from the moment you commit to do a task

and finish at the result you want to achieve.

TIP: If you do not know how to write down steps - start with

the simple process: To do, Doing, Done. Then look closer at

what happens to the tasks in the Doing stage.

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2. Now, write each task on a separate card on your Kanban

board. To differentiate them, use colorful labels, task

descriptions, priority markers, time estimates, deadlines.

How to visualize work on your Kanban board?

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3. As your work progresses, pull each task from left to right

through the process steps until it's finished. Track your tasks

and look for blockers or bottlenecks that stop you.

How to visualize work on your Kanban board?

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What is a bottleneck?It is a place when the work is backed up. Like here: all of your

blogpost have to be checked before publishing. There are only 2

people who can accept your texts and one of them is on holidays.

Look what happened on the board.

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What are blockers?Blockers stop you from moving your work forward, like: waiting

for the client’s feedback or further requirements. You can’t take

the next step until you got the needed information.

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Work in Process (WIP) is the amount of work that we decide to

handle at one time. Before setting up limits, you should ask two vital

questions:

1. How many people do we have in our team?

2. How many things do we want them to work on at a time? I find

that some slack allows us to deal with variation. It also makes

time to do things that are important, but no urgent.

II. Limit Work in a Process (WIP)

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Don’t try to be a superhero and do everything. Get more done by

doing less. It is counterintuitive, but it is a powerful idea. Leaving

some slack in a system allows team for learning, improving and

dealing with the unforeseen.

How to limit my work?

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How to use slack time?

Slack time doesn’t equal to idle time. A capacity of 100%

doesn’t bring us to 100% productivity. Why? Because we are

too busy to start improving. By doing things the way we are

doing right now, we won’t get better results.

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You can implement WIP limits by adding a capacity limit to each column.

A Kanban tool allows you to set limits to keep a steady rhythm without

overloading team members. It discourages people from wasteful

'multitasking', reduces switching costs and encourages collaboration.

How to limit work on your Kanban board?

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Limiting WIP helps you to complete tasks faster. By focusing on

only one task, you achieve a better completion time than by

working on two tasks at the same time.

Why should you limit WIP?

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Improvement should be based on objective measurements.

Why? It increases our chance to make a change that matters

and it brings us measurable results.

III. Measure, improve and adapt a new flow

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How to measure progress on your Kanban board?

Each day, review the status of the tasks on the Kanban board

working from right to left. Ask yourself the questions: Where are the

bottlenecks? Are any tasks blocked? Is anyone multitasking? Which

tasks seems stuck?

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How to measure progress on your Kanban board?

Finding and applying good metrics is a difficult step. Using the

simple measures generated by a kanban tool you can get the

information you need to improve your current process.

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How to measure progress on your Kanban board?

Use visual charts to see the progress of a project. What does it say? Look if

the work in progress area grows or rather stays constant over time. If it is

constant or decreasing, you are most likely doing well. If it is growing then

you need to dig deeper. Like: if your team size, project type or work condition

have not changed, but work in progress is growing, you may have an issue to

deal with.

Two programmers on vacation

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Visualization helps you to see problems

Observe and read signs - look at the board - it will show you where the

work is blocked, who’s overloaded and where there is a bottleneck

forming. Or even more, it helps to see upcoming problems.

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Get started with a Kanban board todayCheck out Kanbanery.com

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www.kanbanery.com

Any questions?Let me know at: [email protected]