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InfoQ Homepage Kanban Content on InfoQ

  • Is it Time to Stop Estimating User Stories?

    Most new Agile teams transition from hours based estimates to relative estimation using story points, but do we even need estimates at all?

  • Kanban Boards from Sys Admin to Sales

    Mattias Skarin, co-author of InfoQ's popular mini-book on Kanban and Scrum, shares a set of kanban boards that can be used to visually manage anything from system administration, to development teams with multiple clients, to sales.

  • Kanban in the Home

    Practitioners are finding interesting applications of Kanban concepts in the home, far from the office and factory floor.

  • Myths of Kanban

    How has the Lean development practice of Kanban been misunderstood? Learn to separate fact from fiction when it comes to Kanban.

  • Should We Move a Failed Story Back?

    What should we do with a story on our task board when it fails testing?

  • Released: Aldon Agile Manager

    Last week on December 1st Aldon released the Aldon Agile Manager and InfoQ spoke with Dan Magid, Chief Product Strategist of Aldon, about this new product. Agile Manager is a free agile project management tool meant to provide better planning, prioritization and collaboration.

  • Get Back To Work!

    Hitting a kanban limit introduces slack into an organization by temporarily stopping the work that feeds into a bottleneck. So how can you convince management that introducing a kanban limit (i.e. stopping work) could actually be a good thing?

  • The Lean Software & Systems Conference 2010 Underway In Atlanta

    The Lean Software & Systems Conference kicked off Wednesday in Atlanta with a great diversity of exciting activities and talks by Don Reinertsen, Alan Chedalawada, Alan Shalloway, Mary Poppendieck, Joshua Kerievsky, the duo of James Shore and Arlo Belsheee, and many more

  • US Scrum Gathering 2010 Kicks Off With a Day of "Deep Dives"

    The 2010 US Scrum Gathering kicked off Monday in Orlando with a buzzworthy day of "deep dive" learning, collaboration, and healthy debate.

  • You Can Say No to 'Pull' in Kanban

    Kanban places a lot of emphasis on the pull psychology. Most people who subscribe to lean ideas prefer pull systems as opposed to traditional push systems as they are deemed to be superior for performance and productivity. However, there might be situations where you would want to say No to a pull.

  • Minibook: Scrum and Kanban: Making the Most of Both

    Scrum and Kanban are two flavours of Agile software development - two deceptively simple but surprisingly powerful approaches to software development. So how do they relate to each other? The new InfoQ minibook by Henrik Kniberg and Mattias Skarin, Kanban and Scrum - making the most of both, clears up the fog so you can figure out how Kanban and Scrum might be useful in your environment.

  • ScrumBan - Evolution or Oxymoron?

    Kanban workshops, courses and conferences are springing up, and practicing Agilists are investigating what this method, adapted from Lean, offers their teams. Attractive benefits are cited, from revealing bottlenecks to happy teams experiencing more "flow". But thought leaders warn that Kanban's laid back approach is "kryptonite" to Scrum's call to resolve impediments immediately.

  • Wrong and Right Reasons to Apply Kanban

    Kanban's aim is to minimize WIP (Work-In-Process), or inventory, between processes by making sure that the upstream process produces parts only if its downstream process needs it. Of late, Lean and Kanban are growing in popularity. More and more companies are setting up Kanban Boards, limiting WIP and eliminating Muda. Michael Dubakov investigated the wrong and right reasons for applying Kanban.

  • Observations on Lean in Action in Japan

    What did a group of Agilists see when they "went to the gemba" in Japan to observe Lean in action? Here is a roundup of observations from bloggers and newsgroup writers on this spring's "Roots of Lean" tour to Japan, led by Mary and Tom Poppendieck. The tour visited both manufacturing and software organizations, and included Henrik Kniberg, Sune Gynthersen, & Gabrielle Benefield, among others.

  • James Shore With More On Keeping It (Agile) Real

    In a casual interview, InfoQ got to talk with James Shore about some of the topics he's been most vocal about lately, including his Art Of Agile book, recent waves of watered-down agile, and how Kanban might be less than the whole picture.

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