Limiting your work in progress increases the amount of work you can.
Building Your First Personal Kanban
What is a Kanban?
A kanban is a tool to visualize, organize, and complete work. The first official use of kanban can be traced to Taiichi Ohno's work at Toyota. He needed a way to quickly communicate to all workers how much work was being done, in what state it was, and how the work was being done. His goal was to make work processes transparent - meaning he wanted everyone, not just managers to know what was "really" going on. The goal was to empower line workers to improve how Toyota worked. Everyone had a hand in making Toyota better.In the image to the right we see two work flows with work flowing through them. The top part of the board shows three states: Backlog, Doing, and Done. Tasks move across this simple workflow.In a subtle way, this is doing three main things:
Showing us the work we have in progress
Showing us all the work we haven't gotten to yet
Showing us how efficiently we work
That's it! That's all there is to a kanban physically.For personal kanban, we take the simplicity of this system and use it to help us understand how we do what we do and how long it takes to do it. Simply having clarity around our workload is a tremendous psychological gift.
The Five Somethings of Waste.
Kanban is Workipedia
A wiki is a website anyone can edit.
A kanban is a workflow anyone can edit.
A wiki entry is always able to be improved upon.
A kanban card is always able to be refined.
In wikis, there is a constant reification of ideas.
In kanban, there is a constant reification of work.
In wikis, incorrect information is identified by the group and excised.
In kanban, waste is identified by the group and excised.
A wiki stores and displays information to make group effort available to all.
A kanban stores and displays information to make group effort available to all.
A wiki stores and displays information to make personal contribution explicit.
A kanban stores and displays information to make personal contribution explicit.
A wiki draws on the natural human drive to complete a task.
A kanban draws on the natural human drive to complete a task.
A wiki is self healing through social editing.
A kanban is self healing through social management.
A wiki is a fundamentally simple concept with massive social repercussions.
A kanban is a fundamentally simple concept with massive social repercussions.
Kanban is Workipedia.