InfoQ Homepage Lean Content on InfoQ
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Trying out Kanban at Comcast
Trevor Lalish-Menagh shares his experience introducing Kanban, what has worked and what hasn’t.
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Building a Learning Organization (from any level)
Matt Barcomb discusses “amplifying learning”, focusing on setting up learning environments and common organizational pitfalls.
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Small 'k' Kanban
Gerry Kirk on how to be more effective using two Personal Kanban rules: Visualize Work and Start Stopping, Start Finishing.
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User Experience - More Than Just a Pretty Stick
Lane Halley advises on building and organizing a User Experience process based on the Lean Startup cycle.
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Lean Data Architecture: Minimize Investment, Maximize Value
Manvir Singh Grewal and Brandon Byars propose a business intelligence workflow along with Lean principles and practices for implementing a data warehouse and reporting capability.
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The “Waste”berg: Traditional Project Resourcing Methods
Stacia Viscardi outlines the weaknesses of traditional resourcing methods and their illusion of efficiency, presenting a way for transitioning to a leaner and more innovative approach.
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Better Product Definition with Lean UX and Design Thinking
Jeff Gothelf explains how to create better product definitions with Design Thinking and Lean UX.
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Turbo-Charging Agile Software Development with Lean Methods
Satish Thatte introduces Scrum, Agile and Lean, then explains how Lean can be used to enhance Agile practices.
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Choosing the Right Agile Innovation Practices
Roman Pichler shares insight on Agile practices that can improve innovation, discussing the innovation stages and how product ownership, process, and project setup are influenced by uncertainty.
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Lean Coffee
Adam Yuret introduces Lean Coffee, a structured and agenda-less meeting where Agile and Lean principles are applied.
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We Are No Engineers
Jim Benson develops the idea that software is not engineered, and it is better done collaboratively by a communicative team using Agile and Kanban methodology and tools.
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Embracing Variability
Don Reinertsen proposes addressing uncertainty not by considering it harmful nor by embracing it but by efficiently reducing it in the context of the economic laws governing the software dev process.