This document summarizes how Scrum and Kanban can be combined to improve agile practices. It provides an overview of Scrum and Kanban, including their origins, key principles and diagrams. It then discusses areas where Kanban concepts like work in progress limits and visualizing workflow can be applied within Scrum processes like discovery, delivery and operations. Contact information is provided for the presenters to learn more about agile consulting, training and certification offerings.
6. Agile in a Nutshell
Business IT
• Business & IT (Product & Dev)
• working together with a
• focus on customer needs and
• delivering value
• incrementally (in small batches)
• with steady feedback in
• self-organizing teams
++
Value
7. Two Origins, Two Approaches
?
Manufacturing
Toyota Production System (TPS) – Source: toyota-global.com“The New New Product Development Game“ (1986) by Takeuchi and Nonaka.
Type A – Isolated cycles of work
Type B – Overlapping work
Type C – All at once
Product Development
Honda, Canon, Toyota, 3M, …
13. • System of organizing principles and practices for
visualizing and optimizing workflow.
• Columns represents activities in the work process.
• Cards (service requests, features, tickets) are pulled
across the board as capacity allows
• Team process policies govern how and when a
card moves across the board.
• WIP limits, a managed commitment point, and a
signaling mechanism to pull new work into the
system are key elements of a Kanban system.
Kanban in a Nutshell (sort of!)
14. Where Scrum teams might apply Kanban
Deployment/OpsDiscovery
Delivery
18. Contact Us
Laura Richardson
SVP of Sales
+1-877-505-3684
lrichardson@appliedframeworks.com
twitter.com/lcaldie
linkedin.com/in/lauracaldierichardson
appliedframeworks.com
AGILE CONSULTING | ONLINE TRAINING | CLASSROOM
TRAINING
Kert Peterson
Principal Consultant
+1-919-914-2884
kpeterson@appliedframeworks.com
linkedin.com/in/kertpeterson
appliedframeworks.com
AGILE CONSULTING | ONLINE TRAINING | CLASSROOM
TRAINING