A look at how we deliver value, incorporating diverse ideas that can be applied to organizations.
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Kanban for process improvement
Kanban is a popular topic these days in the agile world, even spurring some debate about whether or not it is a lean technique. While is does move away from some of the standard elements of agile such as fixed length iterations, in my opinion this is another good tool for any project manager's toolbox. If you're looking for a good overview of Kanban for software development, go here.
As I was thinking about it, I could see how Kanban would be especially effective in Business Process Improvement (BPI) where Lean is being used. The idea to BPI is to apply Kaizen; find an improvement, implement it, watch the results, and then figure out the next improvement and repeat the cycle.
Kanban would work well because you aren't trying to build up a long queue of improvements. The completion of one improvement is the signal to examine your process and identify your next improvement; just like running low on a part in manufacturing is the signal to get more parts.
For example, you've implemented a new business process in your organization, most likely with a BPM tool. A good BPM tool will capture metrics on project execution; how long are various steps taking, are there bottlenecks, are exception paths being followed a lot etc. Based on this, you would identify the next improvement. Maybe, for example, putting in some business rules to automate an approval that is currently a manual step. This improvement would go through your development cycle and be implemented. At this point, your queue is empty; signaling for the next improvement. Or it could be you already have a list of improvements, you just need to pick the next one off the list and move it to the first queue in your development process, which may be elaboration. When it moves on to the next queue (development maybe), something else moves into the elaboration queue. With Kanban, you've turned your development lifecycle into more of a pipeline and your process keeps improving.
Thanks for sharing this info and post.
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Project Management