Kanban

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Kanban is a systematical approach used to visualize, control, and measure the progress of tasks in a project. The word Kanban is rooted from the Japanese language and is the combination of the word ''kan'' meaning ''visual'' and ''ban'' meaning ''card''. <ref name=Kaltenecker2015> Klaus Leopold, Siegfried Kaltenecker (2015). <i> Kanban Change Leadership – Creating a Culture of continuous Improvements</i>. John Wiley & Sohns </ref>
 
Kanban is a systematical approach used to visualize, control, and measure the progress of tasks in a project. The word Kanban is rooted from the Japanese language and is the combination of the word ''kan'' meaning ''visual'' and ''ban'' meaning ''card''. <ref name=Kaltenecker2015> Klaus Leopold, Siegfried Kaltenecker (2015). <i> Kanban Change Leadership – Creating a Culture of continuous Improvements</i>. John Wiley & Sohns </ref>
  
Kanban has its origin in the late 1940s when Toyota decided to put its efforts in the development of a production control system with the goal of shortening the time required from the start to the completion of a process. The Kanban system is a sign-based scheduling system that helped Toyota to improve production efficiency and eliminate waste, establishing the <span class="plainlinks">[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just-in-time_manufacturing'''JIT (just-in-time)''']</span> manufacturing system that is a central philosophy of <span class="plainlinks">[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lean_thinking'''Lean Thinking''']</span>. In recent years the concept of Kanban got widely adopted especially as a project management tool for software development, but it can be applied to just about any industry, either process, production or task related. [5]
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Kanban has its origin in the late 1940s when Toyota decided to put its efforts in the development of a production control system with the goal of shortening the time required from the start to the completion of a process. The Kanban system is a sign-based scheduling system that helped Toyota to improve production efficiency and eliminate waste, establishing the <span class="plainlinks">[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just-in-time_manufacturing'''JIT (just-in-time)''']</span> manufacturing system that is a central philosophy of <span class="plainlinks">[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lean_thinking'''Lean Thinking''']</span>. In recent years the concept of Kanban got widely adopted especially as a project management tool for software development, but it can be applied to just about any industry, either process, production or task related.<ref name=swkanban> Dos Santos, Paulo Sérgio & Beltrão, Alessandro & Pedraça de Souza, Bruno & Travassos, Guilherme (2018). <i> On the benefits and challenges of using kanban in software engineering: a structured synthesis study </i>. Journal of Software Engineering Research and Development. 6. 10.1186/s40411-018-0057-1. </ref>
  
  

Revision as of 18:25, 21 February 2021

Kanban is a systematical approach used to visualize, control, and measure the progress of tasks in a project. The word Kanban is rooted from the Japanese language and is the combination of the word kan meaning visual and ban meaning card. [1]

Kanban has its origin in the late 1940s when Toyota decided to put its efforts in the development of a production control system with the goal of shortening the time required from the start to the completion of a process. The Kanban system is a sign-based scheduling system that helped Toyota to improve production efficiency and eliminate waste, establishing the JIT (just-in-time) manufacturing system that is a central philosophy of Lean Thinking. In recent years the concept of Kanban got widely adopted especially as a project management tool for software development, but it can be applied to just about any industry, either process, production or task related.[2]


Contents

Big Idea

A



B

JIT (just-in-time)


Kanban Cards

Kanban Board

Measuring Performance

Work In Progress (WiP)

Lead Time

Cycle Time

Throughput

Interrelation of the Metrics - Little's Law

Visualizing the Workflow

Cumulative Flow Diagram (CFD)

Application of Kanban

Kanban in the Context of Project, Program & Portfolio Management

Project Management:

Program Management:

Portfolio Management:

Benefits & Limitations using Kanban

Benefits

Limitations

Kanban vs Scrum

Getting Started with Kanban

Implementation Rules

Kanban Software

References

  1. Klaus Leopold, Siegfried Kaltenecker (2015). Kanban Change Leadership – Creating a Culture of continuous Improvements. John Wiley & Sohns
  2. Dos Santos, Paulo Sérgio & Beltrão, Alessandro & Pedraça de Souza, Bruno & Travassos, Guilherme (2018). On the benefits and challenges of using kanban in software engineering: a structured synthesis study . Journal of Software Engineering Research and Development. 6. 10.1186/s40411-018-0057-1.

Annotated Bibliography

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