Kanban was originally created as a scheduling system to help manufacturing organizations determine what to produce, when to produce it, and how much to produce. Although this may not sound like software development, these lean principles can be successfully applied to development teams to improve the delivery of value through better visibility and limits on work in process.
This webinar will provide an overview of the Kanban method, including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development.
Come join us for this free Webinar!
A Day in the Life: Developer Enhancements with Visual Studio 2012Imaginet
The newest release of Visual Studio 2012 is rich with new tools that enhance standard developer activities. In this session, we’ll review and demonstrate some of these new features, such as Unit Testing, Code Reviews, Code Clones, and other developer tools.
Approaches to Kanban with Microsoft Team Foundation Server (TFS) Dec 6-2012Imaginet
Although originally created to help manufacturing organizations schedule and improve processes, Kanban can also be effectively applied to software development. The lean principles of manufacturing can help development teams improve delivery through better visibility and limits on work in process. This Live Web Workshop will start with an overview of the Kanban method including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development. We'll then move from theory into some of the practice application, demonstrating how Microsoft's Visual Studio 2012 Team Foundation Server 2012 can assist with work in progress visualization, determining limits, and improving processes.
Top Business Benefits of Application Lifecycle Management (ALM)Imaginet
Why should your business focus on Application Lifecycle Management? What benefits will you see to your overall business? How does ALM impact your bottom line? Come attend this free webinar to discover all the answers!
Kanban was originally created as a scheduling system to help manufacturing organizations determine what to produce, when to produce it, and how much to produce. Although this may not sound like software development, these lean principles can be successfully applied to development teams to improve the delivery of value through better visibility and limits on work in process.
This webinar will provide an overview of the Kanban method, including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development. We’ll also describe how Team Foundation Server can be used as a foundation for your work visualization and work flow management. Come join us for this free Webinar!
The Newest of the New with Visual Studio and TFS 2012Imaginet
By itself, Visual Studio 2012 included many compelling new features not available in prior releases. But Microsoft hasn’t stopped. Since the production release in August 2012, Microsoft has continued to release more new capabilities. In this session we’ll walk through some of the latest and greatest enhancements that you can use in your Visual Studio and TFS 2012 environment.
Introduction to kanban calgary .net user group - feb 6Dave White
February 6, 2013 Calgary .NET User Group Lunch Seminar series - An introduction to Kanban presented by Dave White of Imaginet (http://www.imaginet.com) and board member at Lean Kanban University (http://www.leankanbanuniversity.com)
Approaches to Kanban using Team Foundation Server - Dec 20Imaginet
Although originally created to help manufacturing organizations schedule and improve processes, Kanban can also be effectively applied to software development. The lean principles of manufacturing can help development teams improve delivery through better visibility and limits on work in process. This Live Web Workshop will start with an overview of the Kanban method including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development. We'll then move from theory into some of the practice application, demonstrating how Microsoft's Visual Studio 2012 Team Foundation Server 2012 can assist with work in progress visualization, determining limits, and improving processes.
What is DevOps? It’s a fairly hot term in today’s application development and operations space,but there are many different definitions as to what DevOps really is. Ultimately, DevOps is abouthow teams build software, deploy software and maintain it throughout its lifecycle. There is nosingle, right answer to the question, but there are a number of tools and strategies that can helpcustomers adopt a winning DevOps process that allows dev and operations teams to moreproductive together.In this session, the audience will learn what DevOps is at a high level, provide strategies for howto implement a DevOps process that fits their organization’s needs and how the MicrosoftApplication Lifecycle Management (ALM) tooling can help with this. As part of the session,attendees can expect to learn how to set up the Microsoft ALM stack for their teams and how touse it effectively in their software development lifecycle, regardless of the role each individual plays on the team.
A Day in the Life: Developer Enhancements with Visual Studio 2012Imaginet
The newest release of Visual Studio 2012 is rich with new tools that enhance standard developer activities. In this session, we’ll review and demonstrate some of these new features, such as Unit Testing, Code Reviews, Code Clones, and other developer tools.
Approaches to Kanban with Microsoft Team Foundation Server (TFS) Dec 6-2012Imaginet
Although originally created to help manufacturing organizations schedule and improve processes, Kanban can also be effectively applied to software development. The lean principles of manufacturing can help development teams improve delivery through better visibility and limits on work in process. This Live Web Workshop will start with an overview of the Kanban method including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development. We'll then move from theory into some of the practice application, demonstrating how Microsoft's Visual Studio 2012 Team Foundation Server 2012 can assist with work in progress visualization, determining limits, and improving processes.
Top Business Benefits of Application Lifecycle Management (ALM)Imaginet
Why should your business focus on Application Lifecycle Management? What benefits will you see to your overall business? How does ALM impact your bottom line? Come attend this free webinar to discover all the answers!
Kanban was originally created as a scheduling system to help manufacturing organizations determine what to produce, when to produce it, and how much to produce. Although this may not sound like software development, these lean principles can be successfully applied to development teams to improve the delivery of value through better visibility and limits on work in process.
This webinar will provide an overview of the Kanban method, including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development. We’ll also describe how Team Foundation Server can be used as a foundation for your work visualization and work flow management. Come join us for this free Webinar!
The Newest of the New with Visual Studio and TFS 2012Imaginet
By itself, Visual Studio 2012 included many compelling new features not available in prior releases. But Microsoft hasn’t stopped. Since the production release in August 2012, Microsoft has continued to release more new capabilities. In this session we’ll walk through some of the latest and greatest enhancements that you can use in your Visual Studio and TFS 2012 environment.
Introduction to kanban calgary .net user group - feb 6Dave White
February 6, 2013 Calgary .NET User Group Lunch Seminar series - An introduction to Kanban presented by Dave White of Imaginet (http://www.imaginet.com) and board member at Lean Kanban University (http://www.leankanbanuniversity.com)
Approaches to Kanban using Team Foundation Server - Dec 20Imaginet
Although originally created to help manufacturing organizations schedule and improve processes, Kanban can also be effectively applied to software development. The lean principles of manufacturing can help development teams improve delivery through better visibility and limits on work in process. This Live Web Workshop will start with an overview of the Kanban method including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development. We'll then move from theory into some of the practice application, demonstrating how Microsoft's Visual Studio 2012 Team Foundation Server 2012 can assist with work in progress visualization, determining limits, and improving processes.
What is DevOps? It’s a fairly hot term in today’s application development and operations space,but there are many different definitions as to what DevOps really is. Ultimately, DevOps is abouthow teams build software, deploy software and maintain it throughout its lifecycle. There is nosingle, right answer to the question, but there are a number of tools and strategies that can helpcustomers adopt a winning DevOps process that allows dev and operations teams to moreproductive together.In this session, the audience will learn what DevOps is at a high level, provide strategies for howto implement a DevOps process that fits their organization’s needs and how the MicrosoftApplication Lifecycle Management (ALM) tooling can help with this. As part of the session,attendees can expect to learn how to set up the Microsoft ALM stack for their teams and how touse it effectively in their software development lifecycle, regardless of the role each individual plays on the team.
Using the Kanban Method with Team Foundation ServerImaginet
Kanban was originally created as a scheduling system to help manufacturing organizations determine what to produce, when to produce it, and how much to produce. Although this may not sound like software development, these lean principles can be successfully applied to development teams to improve the delivery of value through better visibility and limits on work in process.
This webinar will provide an overview of the Kanban method, including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development. We'll also describe how Team Foundation Server can be used as a foundation for your work visualization and work flow management.
Relieveing the Testing Bottle Neck - WebinarCprime
When shifting to Agile, testing is often a bottleneck in the process, as it is the last step in the cycle. But, the responsibility to remove the bottleneck is not on the tester alone.
Drafted presentation to encourage changes to Development processes considering the crises brought on by injecting a start-up into an enterprise environment
Resource Planning is one of the biggest headaches for medium to large organizations. Creating a detailed resource plan that is meaningful is very difficult, and keeping it up to date is almost impossible. Plans that look good are often an attractive fiction, full of unrealistic assumptions, over-allocations, and the spreading of too-few people in too many ways.
Agile Resource Planning provides a very different approach to the classic model. It produces realistic plans that are simple to maintain, and effective for planning work over time. In this webinar, Dr. Kevin Thompson will present new concepts in Agile Resource Planning, which provide a practical and easy-to-use approach to Resource Planning that can be used for Agile and classic environments.
Leading IT Service Management from Scrum to KanbanIan Jones
Case study presentation of an IT Service Management team who used Agile Scrum and then switched to Lean Kanban as their way of working.
Discover more at http://www.ianjones.co
This webinar will provide guidance for proper planning and managing, in order to get your distributed teams working smoothly and effectively. Prerequisites: A working knowledge of Lean and Scrum NPD methods (stand-up meetings, user stories, backlog, sprints, burn-down charts, etc.)
We will cover the following topics in this webinar:
· Qualifying and monitoring distributed partners
· Planning an Agile project
· Project execution across time-zones and cultures
· Encouraging true Innovation and Collaboration
· Effective Internet tools
· Q&A
Scrumban Demystified. Talk from Agile New England.
A few of the Scrumban Evolutions from Mamamoth bank from the upcoming book on Scrumban.
More excerpts can be found at facebook.com/scrumban
Learn more at scrumban.io
Do you have a case study of applying the Kanban Method in a Scrum context. We want to learn more from your experiments and results. Contact us at info@codegenesys.com
Pecha kucha format- how can devops be implemented with lean and agileRavi Tadwalkar
Title:
-------
Case Study: Lean Manufacturing plant level continuous improvement
How can DevOps be implemented with Lean and Agile?
Description:
-----------------
How can we leverage our knowledge of Lean Manufacturing and TPS (Toyota Production System) to implement Agile & DevOps in organizations?
My topic is about "how DevOps can be implemented with Lean and Agile", by implementing Enterprise Kanban system that has this value stream:
“Portfolio Kanban (upstream “Epics”) -> Scrum / ScrumBan / Kanban “In the middle” -> Release Engineering Kanban(Downstream “Deployable Artifacts”),
Presentation History:
Agile2016, PechaKuchaLightening Talk on July 27, 2016
Reference:
---------------
Slides 21-27 in my preso:
http://www.slideshare.net/RaviTadwalkar/devops-approach-point-of-view-by-ravi-tadwalkar
This was some thoughts for maturing our Agile SDLC with some specific notes on how to improve JIRA workflows. This was a discussion slide deck; it's very wordy
Quality Coding: What's New with Visual Studio 2012Imaginet
The newest release of Visual Studio 2012 is rich with new tools that enhance standard developer activities. In this session, we’ll review and demonstrate some of these new features, such as Unit Testing, Code Reviews, Code Clones, and other developer tools. Come join us for this free Webinar!
Using the Kanban Method with Team Foundation ServerImaginet
Kanban was originally created as a scheduling system to help manufacturing organizations determine what to produce, when to produce it, and how much to produce. Although this may not sound like software development, these lean principles can be successfully applied to development teams to improve the delivery of value through better visibility and limits on work in process.
This webinar will provide an overview of the Kanban method, including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development. We'll also describe how Team Foundation Server can be used as a foundation for your work visualization and work flow management.
Relieveing the Testing Bottle Neck - WebinarCprime
When shifting to Agile, testing is often a bottleneck in the process, as it is the last step in the cycle. But, the responsibility to remove the bottleneck is not on the tester alone.
Drafted presentation to encourage changes to Development processes considering the crises brought on by injecting a start-up into an enterprise environment
Resource Planning is one of the biggest headaches for medium to large organizations. Creating a detailed resource plan that is meaningful is very difficult, and keeping it up to date is almost impossible. Plans that look good are often an attractive fiction, full of unrealistic assumptions, over-allocations, and the spreading of too-few people in too many ways.
Agile Resource Planning provides a very different approach to the classic model. It produces realistic plans that are simple to maintain, and effective for planning work over time. In this webinar, Dr. Kevin Thompson will present new concepts in Agile Resource Planning, which provide a practical and easy-to-use approach to Resource Planning that can be used for Agile and classic environments.
Leading IT Service Management from Scrum to KanbanIan Jones
Case study presentation of an IT Service Management team who used Agile Scrum and then switched to Lean Kanban as their way of working.
Discover more at http://www.ianjones.co
This webinar will provide guidance for proper planning and managing, in order to get your distributed teams working smoothly and effectively. Prerequisites: A working knowledge of Lean and Scrum NPD methods (stand-up meetings, user stories, backlog, sprints, burn-down charts, etc.)
We will cover the following topics in this webinar:
· Qualifying and monitoring distributed partners
· Planning an Agile project
· Project execution across time-zones and cultures
· Encouraging true Innovation and Collaboration
· Effective Internet tools
· Q&A
Scrumban Demystified. Talk from Agile New England.
A few of the Scrumban Evolutions from Mamamoth bank from the upcoming book on Scrumban.
More excerpts can be found at facebook.com/scrumban
Learn more at scrumban.io
Do you have a case study of applying the Kanban Method in a Scrum context. We want to learn more from your experiments and results. Contact us at info@codegenesys.com
Pecha kucha format- how can devops be implemented with lean and agileRavi Tadwalkar
Title:
-------
Case Study: Lean Manufacturing plant level continuous improvement
How can DevOps be implemented with Lean and Agile?
Description:
-----------------
How can we leverage our knowledge of Lean Manufacturing and TPS (Toyota Production System) to implement Agile & DevOps in organizations?
My topic is about "how DevOps can be implemented with Lean and Agile", by implementing Enterprise Kanban system that has this value stream:
“Portfolio Kanban (upstream “Epics”) -> Scrum / ScrumBan / Kanban “In the middle” -> Release Engineering Kanban(Downstream “Deployable Artifacts”),
Presentation History:
Agile2016, PechaKuchaLightening Talk on July 27, 2016
Reference:
---------------
Slides 21-27 in my preso:
http://www.slideshare.net/RaviTadwalkar/devops-approach-point-of-view-by-ravi-tadwalkar
This was some thoughts for maturing our Agile SDLC with some specific notes on how to improve JIRA workflows. This was a discussion slide deck; it's very wordy
Quality Coding: What's New with Visual Studio 2012Imaginet
The newest release of Visual Studio 2012 is rich with new tools that enhance standard developer activities. In this session, we’ll review and demonstrate some of these new features, such as Unit Testing, Code Reviews, Code Clones, and other developer tools. Come join us for this free Webinar!
Quality Coding: What’s New with Visual Studio 2012Imaginet
The newest release of Visual Studio 2012 is rich with new tools that enhance standard developer activities. In this session, we’ll review and demonstrate some of these new features, such as Unit Testing, Code Reviews, Code Clones, and other developer tools. Come join us for this free Webinar!
In 2010, Microsoft released a bold new features to support management of virtual test environments. “Lab Management” provided the ability to easily spin up test environments, perform automated build and deployments, run automated tests, and collect diagnostic data. Unfortunately, many teams were discouraged by the infrastructure requirements. Now, with Visual Studio 2012 and standard environments, even small teams or groups that can’t use Microsoft’s Hyper-V can still benefit from lab management. This session will demonstrate how to configure your existing environments for many of the same compelling features formally available only with Hyper-V. Come join us for this free Live Web Workshop!
How Microsoft ALM Tools Can Improve Your Bottom LineImaginet
Improved efficiencies, enhanced productivity, reduction of wasted time and effort, and improved team collaboration. Each of these benefits that result from adopting a successful ALM strategy will all help your bottom line. Come find out how at this free webinar!
Getting Started with Visual Studio’s Coded UI Testing: Building Your First Au...Imaginet
This training seminar demonstrates how to record tests run against various types of application user interfaces using Microsoft Visual Studio’s Coded UI Tests and how to replay them at any time. Additionally, we explore how to embed validations, either simple or elaborate, to ensure your application is producing the correct results. Learn how to improve the quality of your applications by having a repeatable set of Microsoft Coded UI Tests available to ensure defects don’t go unnoticed!
In 2010, Microsoft released a bold new features to support management of virtual test environments. “Lab Management” provided the ability to easily spin up test environments, perform automated build and deployments, run automated tests, and collect diagnostic data. Unfortunately, many teams were discouraged by the infrastructure requirements. Now, with Visual Studio 2012 and standard environments, even small teams or groups that can’t use Microsoft’s Hyper-V can still benefit from lab management. This session will demonstrate how to configure your existing environments for many of the same compelling features formally available only with Hyper-V. Come join us for this free Live Web Workshop!
Upgrading to Team Foundation Server (TFS) 2012 – What You Need to Know! (07-2...Imaginet
Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 brings a number of new features into the integrated ALM toolset. With new features like PowerPoint Storyboarding, Integrated Code Review Features, Stakeholder Feedback, and a newly integrated Developer / Operations Workflow, you will quickly find many reasons to upgrade to Visual Studio and Team Foundation Server 2012! In this webinar, we’ll briefly discuss the breadth of new ALM features. Come join us for this free Webinar!
Kanban was originally created as a scheduling system to help manufacturing organizations determine what to produce, when to produce it, and how much to produce. Although this may not sound like software development, these lean principles can be successfully applied to development teams to improve the delivery of value through better visibility and limits on work in process.
This webinar will provide an overview of the Kanban method, including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development.
Come join us for this free Webinar!
Getting Started With Coded UI testing: Building Your First Automated TestImaginet
This training seminar will demonstrate how to record tests run against various types of application user interfaces using Microsoft Visual Studio's Coded UI Tests and how to replay them at any time. Additionally, we will explore how to embed validations, either simple or elaborate, to ensure your application is producing the correct results. Learn how to improve the quality of your applications by having a repeatable set of Microsoft Coded UI Tests available to ensure defects don’t go unnoticed!
Coded UI - Test automation Practices from the FieldClemens Reijnen
CodedUI tests within Visual Studio makes it easy for developers together with tester to create, fully-automated, functional user interface tests. These tests alert the team in an, easy to execute, automated way about regressions. CodedUI tests are easy to create for different UI technologies. But, all kinds of test automation needs an investment. To get a good return on this test automation investment you need to create CodedUI tests in a robust manner which can sustain changes to your application over time.
In this session you will see how maintainable CodedUI tests can be created and how the test infrastructure needs to be configured for efficient execution.
Click through this slide presentation to see an overview of Joel Semeniuk's Exclusive Lecture on How Agile Sparked the 4th Industrial Revolution.
Last month Joel spoke with Scrum Alliance Executives about the concept of Industry 4.0 and how it applies to what we do in our workplaces.
“Accessing data and translating it in real-time to deliver more value is representative of how entire industries are thinking.”
• Has Industry 4.0 already made an impact on your organization?
• Will your company survive by 2020?
• How will you change in an economy driven by value?
Let us know your thoughts on Industry 4.0
Watch the video and learn how Agile is reshaping Manufacturing 4.0.
Too busy to watch? Listen to the audio
Kanban was originally created as a scheduling system to help manufacturing organizations determine what to produce, when to produce it, and how much to produce. Although this may not sound like software development, these lean principles can be successfully applied to development teams to improve the delivery of value through better visibility and limits on work in process.
This webinar will provide an overview of the Kanban method, including the history and motivation, the core principles and practices, and how these apply to efficiency and process improvement in software development. We’ll also describe how Team Foundation Server can be used as a foundation for your work visualization and work flow management. Come join us for this free Webinar!
Using Lean and Kanban to Revolutionize Your OrganizationImaginet
With the introduction of Lean and Kanban into the software developments, teams are now starting to discover how to leverage these principles to revolutionize how they do business. Come find out how you can use Lean and Kanban together with Microsoft TFS to make dramatic improvements in your organization!
Scaling Frame Works are great guideline for Scaling Agile but teams and companies who are working Scrum and/or Kanban for sometime now can scale Agile Implementation following certain disciplines and structural approached and . This talk is to discuss one such implementation.
DOES15 - Damon Edwards - DevOps Kaizen Practical Steps to Start & Sustain a T...Gene Kim
Damon Edwards, Managing Partner, DTO Solutions, Inc
We all love the aspirational DevOps talks about organizations achieving blistering speed and dazzling nimbleness, right? But what can you do when you look internally at your own organization and everything feels complicated, contentious, and stuck? How do you overcome the silos, the legacy, and the entrenched behaviors that are making your DevOps problems seem so intractable?
This talk is about how to start and sustain a DevOps transformations in large and complex organizations using a methodical — and totally reasonable — Kaizen (Continuous Improvement) approach. This talk isn’t about mythical silver bullets or vague philosophies. This talk is about taking a fresh look at proven Lean techniques and empowering teams to find and fix what is getting in the way.
Scaling Agile is easily misunderstood. Scaling is the term we often hear used to describe using Agile methods with large enterprises. Larger enterprises often deal with bigger and more complex problems than small ones. They have more employees, subcontracting companies, different business units, more processes and a strong culture that defines how things are done. At the same time, they need to be able to deliver results in an ever-changing business environment. They need to be Agile but the bigger the company, the bigger the challenges are for scaling Agile.
Scaling frameworks available in the market today are maturing quickly and provide a variety of choices. Like the Agile Manifesto, these frameworks are based on principles, and they vary widely in the specificity of the recommended approach.
In this session, we will compare how two scaling frameworks, LeSS and SAFe, address the challenges of agility at scale. We will talk about how these two frameworks align, coordinate, and manage dependencies across multiple teams to maintain consistency and agility at scale.
Scaling Scrum using Lean/Kanban in AmdocsYuval Yeret
Learn how Amdocs and Agilesparks took an enterprise Scrum implementation to the next step with Lean/Kanban - Presented in the Lean Software and Systems Conference 2010 in Atlanta
As companies evolve to adopt, integrate and leverage software as the defining element of their success in the 21st century, a rash of processes and methodologies are vying for their product teams' attention. This Session will give you guidelines on how to start an innovative business lean and fast by using design thinking, lean and agile approaches and how to build high-performing digital product teams. The session will finish with discussing Lean Agile meets Design Thinking to give a meaningful conclusion.
Post-agile approaches - agile for the real world and how to avoid agile failureYuval Yeret
A session for an ILTAM forum in Israel - Agile is really great. Can it fail? Are failures due to mismatch of practices? principles? Only implementation details?
We will look at the strengths weaknesses opportunities threats related to the major agile frameworks as well as common failure modes and what to do about them
(the actual session includes case studies from audience and agilesparks experience)
How to become a great DevOps Leader, an ITSM Academy WebinarITSM Academy, Inc.
Presenter: Mustafa Kapadia, Service Line Leader, IBM
The ideal DevOps Leader is a tactical or strategic individual who helps design, influence, implement or motivate the cultural transformation proven to be a critical success factor in DevOps adoption. The most successful DevOps leaders understand the human dynamics of cultural change and are equipped with practices, methods, and tools to engage people across the DevOps spectrum. We will explore the role of the DevOps Leader in more detail.
Data Governance in an Agile SCRUM Lean MVP WorldDATAVERSITY
Most of us learned data modeling via a waterfall-driven methodology lens. Yet Agile and other modern development methods have for the most part assumed that data governance is an anti-pattern to just getting things (software) done. Well look at questions such as:
•Are Agile and Data Governance Enemies?
•How can we get stuff done AND get systems delivered?
•And what do we do about existing systems delivered without data governance attention?
We'll also look at how data modeling fits in the answers to these questions.
2014.07 Exec User Group - Atlassian - SydneyServiceRocket
ServiceRocket hosted an Enterprise Executive User Group at Atlassian's world headquarters in Sydney on July 15, 2014.
Presenters included ServiceRocket CEO Rob Castaneda.
Are you crazy? Using Scrum, Kanban, SAFe and DSDM in one Company!!!Matthew Caine
All four Agile approaches in combination in one company! What a radical thought, especially with the fearsome flames of the agile methodology wars!
It all started with Scrum versus Scrum. Then Scrum versus Kanban. Then everybody against DSDM. And finally late last year things escalated with the global take-up of the Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe).
Sadly dogmatic Agilistas continue to see just one (or two) of the four approaches as the solution to everyones’ problems. Despite the fact that no single one can be the silver bullet.
Yet despite this dogmatism, Agile and Lean has made a massive difference to people’s lives. Hundreds of thousands if not millions of IT professionals and hobbyists benefit daily from these approaches. So we must put our ego to one side and remember that the approaches are not about a particular methodology: They are about people and results.
By putting people and results first we can illustrate in this session why, how and where all four approaches (Scrum, Kanban, SAFe & DSDM) are applicable. Incredibly we will see that a particular type of organization should consider all four!
To support this discussion, we will examine different types of organization, each with their own set of characteristics. For each we will explore which approaches would be the most appropriate now and in the future plus risks.
The Newest of the New with Visual Studio and TFS 2012Imaginet
By itself, Visual Studio 2012 included many compelling new features not available in prior releases. But Microsoft hasn’t stopped. Since the production release in August 2012, Microsoft has continued to release more new capabilities. In this session we’ll walk through some of the latest and greatest enhancements that you can use in your Visual Studio and TFS 2012 environment.
Upgrading to TFS 2012: What You Need to Know!Imaginet
Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 brings a number of new features into the integrated ALM toolset. With new features like PowerPoint Storyboarding, Integrated Code Review Features, Stakeholder Feedback, and a newly integrated Developer / Operations Workflow, you will quickly find many reasons to upgrade to Visual Studio and Team Foundation Server 2012! In this webinar, we'll briefly discuss the breadth of new ALM features. Come join us for this free Webinar!
Getting Started with Coded UI Testing: Building Your First Automated TestImaginet
This training seminar demonstrates how to record tests run against various types of application user interfaces using Microsoft Visual Studio’s Coded UI Tests and how to replay them at any time. Additionally, we explore how to embed validations, either simple or elaborate, to ensure your application is producing the correct results. Learn how to improve the quality of your applications by having a repeatable set of Microsoft Coded UI Tests available to ensure defects don’t go unnoticed!
Upgrading to Team Foundation Server (TFS) 2012 – What You Need to Know!Imaginet
Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 brings a number of new features into the integrated ALM toolset. With new features like PowerPoint Storyboarding, Integrated Code Review Features, Stakeholder Feedback, and a newly integrated Developer / Operations Workflow, you will quickly find many reasons to upgrade to Visual Studio and Team Foundation Server 2012! In this webinar, we’ll briefly discuss the breadth of new ALM features.
Why should your business focus on Application Lifecycle Management? What benefits will you see to your overall business? How does ALM impact your bottom line? View this slideshare to discover all the answers!
Streamlining Testing with Visual Studio 2012Imaginet
This is an overview of the Visual Studio 2012 ALM testing tools, including using Microsoft Test & Lab Manager to manage your testing and using test automation to automate your UI testing. The use of Test Lab will be discussed as a means of automating the creation of virtual environments for testing purposes. Deploying to VM environments during build will be demonstrated and facilitate a robust developer/tester lifecycle. Come join us for this free Live Web Workshop!
Team Foundation Server (TFS) provides a robust, enterprise-grade version control system. But how you use that system will determine your level of success. Much has been written about the 'right way' to branch and merge your code. But the fact is, there is no one single best way. This Webinar will discuss the common patterns used for branching and merging code and, more importantly, why to adopt one. We'll talk through aggregate branching models, trade-offs for release management and development, and how to evolve your existing code into the right branching model. Join us for this session and learn how to define the right branching and merging strategy for your team!
In 2010, Microsoft released a bold new featureset to support management of virtual test environments. "Lab Management" provided the ability to easily spin up test environments, perform automated build and deployments, run automated tests, and collect diagnostic data. Unfortunately, many teams were discouraged by the infrastructure requirements. Now, with Visual Studio 2012 and standard environments, even small teams or groups that can't use Microsoft's Hyper-V can still benefit from lab management. This session will demonstrate how to configure your existing environments for many of the same compelling features formally available only with Hyper-V.
The newest release of Visual Studio 2012 is rich with new tools that enhance standard developer activities. In this session, we'll review and demonstrate some of these new features, such as Unit Testing, Code Reviews, Code Clones, and other developer tools.
Why You Should Replace Windows 11 with Nitrux Linux 3.5.0 for enhanced perfor...SOFTTECHHUB
The choice of an operating system plays a pivotal role in shaping our computing experience. For decades, Microsoft's Windows has dominated the market, offering a familiar and widely adopted platform for personal and professional use. However, as technological advancements continue to push the boundaries of innovation, alternative operating systems have emerged, challenging the status quo and offering users a fresh perspective on computing.
One such alternative that has garnered significant attention and acclaim is Nitrux Linux 3.5.0, a sleek, powerful, and user-friendly Linux distribution that promises to redefine the way we interact with our devices. With its focus on performance, security, and customization, Nitrux Linux presents a compelling case for those seeking to break free from the constraints of proprietary software and embrace the freedom and flexibility of open-source computing.
State of ICS and IoT Cyber Threat Landscape Report 2024 previewPrayukth K V
The IoT and OT threat landscape report has been prepared by the Threat Research Team at Sectrio using data from Sectrio, cyber threat intelligence farming facilities spread across over 85 cities around the world. In addition, Sectrio also runs AI-based advanced threat and payload engagement facilities that serve as sinks to attract and engage sophisticated threat actors, and newer malware including new variants and latent threats that are at an earlier stage of development.
The latest edition of the OT/ICS and IoT security Threat Landscape Report 2024 also covers:
State of global ICS asset and network exposure
Sectoral targets and attacks as well as the cost of ransom
Global APT activity, AI usage, actor and tactic profiles, and implications
Rise in volumes of AI-powered cyberattacks
Major cyber events in 2024
Malware and malicious payload trends
Cyberattack types and targets
Vulnerability exploit attempts on CVEs
Attacks on counties – USA
Expansion of bot farms – how, where, and why
In-depth analysis of the cyber threat landscape across North America, South America, Europe, APAC, and the Middle East
Why are attacks on smart factories rising?
Cyber risk predictions
Axis of attacks – Europe
Systemic attacks in the Middle East
Download the full report from here:
https://sectrio.com/resources/ot-threat-landscape-reports/sectrio-releases-ot-ics-and-iot-security-threat-landscape-report-2024/
Securing your Kubernetes cluster_ a step-by-step guide to success !KatiaHIMEUR1
Today, after several years of existence, an extremely active community and an ultra-dynamic ecosystem, Kubernetes has established itself as the de facto standard in container orchestration. Thanks to a wide range of managed services, it has never been so easy to set up a ready-to-use Kubernetes cluster.
However, this ease of use means that the subject of security in Kubernetes is often left for later, or even neglected. This exposes companies to significant risks.
In this talk, I'll show you step-by-step how to secure your Kubernetes cluster for greater peace of mind and reliability.
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
Essentials of Automations: The Art of Triggers and Actions in FMESafe Software
In this second installment of our Essentials of Automations webinar series, we’ll explore the landscape of triggers and actions, guiding you through the nuances of authoring and adapting workspaces for seamless automations. Gain an understanding of the full spectrum of triggers and actions available in FME, empowering you to enhance your workspaces for efficient automation.
We’ll kick things off by showcasing the most commonly used event-based triggers, introducing you to various automation workflows like manual triggers, schedules, directory watchers, and more. Plus, see how these elements play out in real scenarios.
Whether you’re tweaking your current setup or building from the ground up, this session will arm you with the tools and insights needed to transform your FME usage into a powerhouse of productivity. Join us to discover effective strategies that simplify complex processes, enhancing your productivity and transforming your data management practices with FME. Let’s turn complexity into clarity and make your workspaces work wonders!
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
Communications Mining Series - Zero to Hero - Session 1DianaGray10
This session provides introduction to UiPath Communication Mining, importance and platform overview. You will acquire a good understand of the phases in Communication Mining as we go over the platform with you. Topics covered:
• Communication Mining Overview
• Why is it important?
• How can it help today’s business and the benefits
• Phases in Communication Mining
• Demo on Platform overview
• Q/A
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
Pushing the limits of ePRTC: 100ns holdover for 100 daysAdtran
At WSTS 2024, Alon Stern explored the topic of parametric holdover and explained how recent research findings can be implemented in real-world PNT networks to achieve 100 nanoseconds of accuracy for up to 100 days.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...
Introduction to Kanban
1. Introduction to The Kanban Method
Discover how the Kanban Method can Kick Start
a Culture of Continuous Improvement
for
Your Organization
2. Your Speaker
Dave White
Technical Program Director
Imaginet Resources Corp. - Microsoft Partner
• Management Board - Lean-Kanban University
• Advisory Board - LKU’s Accredited Kanban
Training program
– Accredited Kanban Trainer (AKT)
– Kanban Coaching Professional (KCP)
• numerous Microsoft certifications
– Microsoft Certified Trainer
• 15 years of experience
• specializes in helping organizations mature their
software development and information
technology practices
• passionate about Application Lifecycle
Management tooling, techniques, and mindsets
and regularly talks and teaches on a wide range
of ALM topics
http://www.agileramblings.com
4. Symptom
Release Date: in 9-12 months
“We don’t have staff for that project/work”
Lead time for Feature: 12 months
ETA of Bug Fix: ???
“That isn’t what we wanted.”
“We have to get this out right away!”
“The business unit built that?”
“That feature doesn’t matter anymore.”
“We’re really late.”
“We’re waiting on other teams.”
“We’ve got 100s of bugs waiting.”
5. Problem
Lots of work, not enough
capacity
• Quality suffers
• Features delayed
• Technical debt
• How much…
• Work??
• Capacity??
Disengaged people!
8. What We’ve Tried So Far
We’ve tried…
• Chaos is … chaotic
• Waterfall not well suited
• Large batch, single pass,
long duration workflow
“If we just do it better…”
• Scrum is well suited
• prescriptive without
understanding context
12. The Kanban Method is…
…an approach to incremental, evolutionary
process change for organizations.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanban_(development)
13. Kanban Method allows us to…
Our motivation for building kanban systems is
to
prevent overburdening,
control variability in flow
and encourage an evolutionary
approachto change
murimura
14. What causes overburdening and variation?
1. Invisible work
2. Non-instant availability of specialist skills or
collaborators
3. Information fails to arrive before it is needed
4. Hidden/Implicit classes of service that cause
work to be interrupted to process other work
5. Variety in work (complexity & size)
6. Changing priorities related to variety in risks
associated with work (e.g. cost of delay)
7. Capacity constrained specialist skilled workers
or other resources
Are any of these present in your work environment?
15. Organizational Evolution
So Why The Kanban Method
• Designed to…
• Be context sensitive
• Foster organizational learning
• Be evolutionary
• Simple rules to govern complex
systems
• Teams of people are systems
• Agile methods can emerge
• Fully embraces Agile Manifesto
• Lean methods can emerge
• Fully embraces Lean Software
Development Principles
• Tactic-agnostic
• Catalyst for organizational
improvement
kaizen
To make better
16. Kanban Method
… and it’s easy to get started
Kanban Method
agile
lean
• 4 principles
• 6 practices
17. Kanban Method Principles
start with what you do now
agree to pursue incremental,
evolutionary change
initially, respect current roles,
responsibilities & job titles
encourage acts of leadership
18. 6 CORE PRACTICES
visualize
limit WIP
manage flow
make process policies
explicit
develop feedback mechanisms
improve collaboratively
27. WHY ARE WE DOING ALL THIS?
To create a LEARNING capability in our organization
that enables CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT!
We must…
• Have time to discover and implement kaizen
opportunities
• Create theories and experiment
• Give ourselves opportunities to fail
• Learn from your mistakes
28. The Benefits You’ll Experience
• Deeper understanding of
demand and capacity
• Constantly improving teams
• Exposed constraints
• Increased predictability
• Reduced overburdening
Happy People
29. Better Teams = Better Business
• Predictability
• Agility
• Risk Management
• Governance
• Change Management
30. Kaizen Opportunities
For development teams, three areas often need improvements:
Process
The Kanban Method will expose process challenges
Technical
Visualization of work will allow for the capture of metrics that
point to technical limitations
Development Platform
Visualization of workflow will lead to platform improvement
opportunities
31. Inter-dependant
ProcessBottle necks & constraints, hand-offs, overburdening, multi-
tasking, wait times
Technical
Unit Testing, SOLID, DI,
MVC, Technical debt
Development
Platform
Automation (build, quality,
collaboration)
Institutional memory, risk
mitigation
32. Solutions Are Just Waiting to be Discovered
• Work is understood!
• Designed to understand demand
• Discover capacity
• People improve the
system
• People are engaged!
• Empowered
• Own the improvements
• Pull work
• Solving Our Problem
• Our processes are
important
• Learning-focused
approach
34. Team Foundation Server 2012
Team Foundation Server 2012
Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2012
(TFS) is the collaboration platform at the core
of Microsoft's application lifecycle
management (ALM) solution.
35. Kanban on TFS 2012
Kanban on TFS starts with…
http://vsarkanbanguide.codeplex.com/
https://tfs.visualstudio.com/
Ability to track work
Ability to visualize work and flow
41. Where to Start
1. Find a Leader
2. Get Foundational
Knowledge
3. Visualize Your Work
4. Limit your WIP
5. Focus on HIGH Quality
42. Call to Action
• Engage
• Attend our Accredited Core Kanban class with our
Visual Studio day
• Reach out to Dave
• @agileramblings or dwhite@imaginet.com
• Join the Community!
• Lean-Kanban University
• Visit Lean Kanban North America 2014 in San Francisco!
• kanbandev group (Yahoo)
• Limited WIP Society or your local Kanban User Group
Dave White is a Technical Program Director at Imaginet Resources Corp., a Canadian based Microsoft Partner and Microsoft ALM Partner of the Year for 2011. Currently, Dave is serving on the Management Board for Lean-Kanban University, the global standards body for The Kanban Method. He is also on the Advisory Board for LKU’s Accredited Kanban Training program. He holds numerous Microsoft certifications including Microsoft Certified Trainer. With over 15 years of experience, Dave specializes in helping organizations around the world realize their potential through maturing their culture and improving theirsoftware development and information technology practices. Dave is passionate about Application Lifecycle Management tooling, techniques, and mindsets and regularly teaches around the world on a wide range of ALM topics.
Personalize the experience around meMy journey as a consultant working with lots of companiesBecome the “Luke Skywalker” of the presentation
Longer and longer lead times for features/fixesCompetitor is firstMarket has changed – no longer neededAre we doing the right things? (business-driven development)Internal “solution” developed by business
Teams are getting burned outToo much work, not enough timeQuality goes down (uh oh…)Bug fixing times takes up more of our time (Wasteful!!)New features sit in the backlogOr get crammed in with low quality (Wasteful!!!)Are we doing things right? (technically)Disengaged!!! (oh no…)Now we’re in trouble...http://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photo-20586125-frustrated-businessman.php?st=7645278
WHY?“I don’t know!”“The business is unrelenting”“We’re working as hard as we can!!”“We’ve tried and given up”Our industry is so driven to produce solutions for other people’s problem, we often fail to solve our problems!We don’t have the experience to know what is wrong with ourselvesWe don’t know how to discover what is wrongLearning about our problems is not built in to our processesNot given time and space to figure it out and improveOur efficiency problems are mostly non-technicalhttp://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photo-18251736-confused-young-woman-scratches-head.php?st=79dbc5f
What I did to solve my problemshttp://www.istockphoto.com/stock-illustration-4261767-old-map.php?st=e9d038d
http://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photo-19914666-work-in-progress.php?st=93dd0d6So what did I find out there?!?Chaos (Doesn’t matter what we do. Let’s all just scramble!)Waterfall (Still? Really?? )Agile (Scrum, XP, home-grown methodology)Why (there is that word again) didn’t it work?Chaos (self-evident and sneaky – kinda looks like Agile)Waterfall (not well suited to knowledge work)Large batch, single pass, long duration workflow (usually)Agile (well suited, but book methodologies are prescriptive without understanding context)Lack of leadership in adoptionsWe have LOTS of grey-matter horsepower… often pulling in opposite directions
I found a method that was …Learning focusedContext awareSpecific about leveraging teams/people to solve problemsEvolutionary, NOT revolutionaryhttp://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photo-17496132-businessman-has-idea.php?st=6c18412
The Kanban Method is a proven evolutionary, change management approach built on numerous best practices that are intended to target specific problems across the whole knowledge work lifecycle.
The Kanban Method is a proven evolutionary, change management approach built on numerous best practices that are intended to target specific problems across the whole knowledge work lifecycle.
The Kanban Method is a proven evolutionary, change management approach built on numerous best practices that are intended to target specific problems across the whole knowledge work lifecycle.
Why I love The Kanban MethodFocused on the peopleBusiness drivenSimple rules that scale to complex situationsLearning focusedEasy to start!!
So we said that the Kanban Method is a simple set of rules that help us govern complex systems and that really is the case. In fact, the Kanban Method consists of 4 principles that we use to encourage specific behaviour and 6 practices that give us some tactics that allow us to start learning about ourselves and finding solutions to the process problems as they exist in our environments. One of the key advantages of the Kanban Method over other approaches is how easy it is to get started and use so that we can continue to learn and grow over the course of time. http://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photo-20042058-marathon-runners-at-the-starting-line.php?st=dabb4dd
The Kanban Method is easy to get started because of the first principle, which is to start this improvement initiative what modeling how you work today without any changes. The Kanban Method advocates this approach as it has two positive effects that are important in any change initiative. First, we want to be able to understand the current state and create a baseline on which to compare any improvement activities. We want to find the best places to invest our precious time. Secondly, it will minimize the emotional impact to everyone involved. The second principle is a commitment to small, incremental improvement activities. Small increments are excellent learning opportunities where we minimize the cost and impact of sub-optimal changes. And these learning opportunities help teams plan out the next small improvement.The third principle acknowledges that engaged, happy people a key success factor in the delivery of business value and that we need to provide a respectful and safe environment for the people involved in these improvement activities.And finally, we need to create an environment that allows for and encourages the spontaneous display of acts of leadership at all points of the workflow. These acts of leadership will lead to improvement activities that were not anticipated but will arise to specific problems that the team encounters in their day to day activities.
Now that we have some principles to govern our behaviour, the Kanban Method also provides 6 core practices that support the needs of a team that is looking to continuously improve and grow their Kanban Method maturity level. The sixcore practices of the Kanban Method are:VisualizeLimit Work In Process (WIP)Manage flowMake policies explicitDevelop feedback mechanismsImprove collaboratively (using model-driven experiments/scientific method)When adopting the Kanban Method, it is not required to practice all six of these concepts. All teams should start at the top in what is called a “shallow” Kanban implementation. As they grow in maturity and capability, teams then adopt more of the core practices as they move to a “deep” Kanban implementation.
Humans love to see things! We’re very visually oriented. (percentage of brain attributed to visual stimuli?)SoVisualize – This simple tactic suggests that we create a visual representation of the flow of work through the system. In order to do this, we need to describe:Work Item Types in the system (user stories, bugs, improvement activities, support work)Workflow for these Work Item typesAny special behaviours that are associated with work item types (production defects expedited over user stories, only 1 improvement activity in flight at a time)The boundaries of the process being visualizedThe visualization of all of this information will be a powerful tool in impacting the behaviour of the consumers of the information.
Can anyone see where the problem is in this system?
Limit Work In Process (WIP) – systems that limit the amount of work in process tend to reduce overburdening on people and help to identify bottlenecks in the process
Once WIP limits are in place, we formally acknowledge capacity constraints within a phase of our workflow and we can then start to change those constraints
Manage flow – there are many different ways that we can improve the flow characteristics of work through the system and the Kanban Method explains specific tactics for improving flow in the system
Make policies explicit – In making process policies explicit or “writing them down”, we’re providing information to everyone who needs to understand how the system is operating
Develop feedback mechanisms at workflow, inter-workflow and organizational levels – In order to continuously learn and improve, feedback mechanisms must be created and sustained as a part of the way the team works. And these feedback mechanisms are used to manage broader concerns of the organization around the team adopting the Kanban Method.
Improve collaboratively (using experiments/scientific method) – The last practice is to theories couple with observation and measurements to drive improvement activities. This is often described as using a scientific method to guide our improvement activities. Using a scientific method, we would describe an expectation or a “theory” on the impact of a change, ensure we are able to measure the change, and validate our choices.
Kanban is an unapologetic, realistic, representation of the law of physics. – Daniel Vacanti @danvacanti
Many of our clients have experienced real, measurable benefits when they have adopted the Kanban Method as a way to manage their systems. Teams have quantitative information regarding demand in the form of work item types and the frequency at which these work items are introduced. And they understand their capacity to do work in the form of flow time and throughput.And now that teams understand demand and capacity in a quantitative fashion, we can measurably improve using flow improvement tactics or the elimination of bottlenecks in the workflow.Empowered to innovate Scientific approach (PDSA • LMB • OODA)Exposed ConstraintsSelf-imposedTeam & Organization scopeCan be rectified once exposedAnd on a more qualitative note, we very often see that team members are happier now that they have been given the permission and the tools necessary to improve the software development process. And since we can see when people are overburdened, we can proactively help teams achieve a sustainable pace and reduce the overburdening that burns out teams and causes employee dissatisfaction.http://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photo-15520861-elegant-middle-aged-woman-with-her-arms-crossed-against-white.php?st=fd67935
Several of the observed benefits to the business when knowledge work teams use the Kanban Method include: Increased predictabilityImproved agilityBetter risk managementImproved governanceImproved change management@agilemanager: Predictability, improved agility, better governance, evolutionary change, better risk management
Kanban is an unapologetic, realistic, representation of the law of physics. – Daniel Vacanti @danvacanti
People Solving Problem - http://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photo-12107866-group-of-business-people-looking-at-a-chart.php?st=25d7c05So lets revisit our original process problems and look at how the Kanban Method can help teams find solutions to these problems.To much work, not enough capacityDesigned to discover capacityEvolve your capability (build more capacity)Give people the time and space to improve both quality and processDisengaged peopleSelf-directed teams that are empowered to do the right thingOwn the opportunity to improveThe mountain of work is no longer on their shouldersNot Solving Our ProblemOur problems are mostly process relatedA learning-based approach to change that encourages evolution through a kaizen culture
The Tools That I’ve used with my teamshttp://www.istockphoto.com/stock-illustration-4261767-old-map.php?st=e9d038d
People Solving Problem - http://www.istockphoto.com/stock-photo-12107866-group-of-business-people-looking-at-a-chart.php?st=25d7c05To much work, not enough capacityDesigned to discover capacityEvolve your capability (build more capacity)Give people the time and space to improve both quality and processDisengaged peopleSelf-directed teams that are empowered to do the right thingOwn the opportunity to improveThe mountain of work is no longer on their shouldersNot Solving Our ProblemOur problems are mostly process relatedA learning-based approach to change that encourages evolution through a kaizen culture
What I did to solve my problemshttp://www.istockphoto.com/stock-illustration-4261767-old-map.php?st=e9d038d