Lean Agile Management Podcast
Lean Agile Management Podcast
Kanbanize
Welcome to Lean Agile Management Podcast – a podcast for business leaders and managers who want to take the mystery out of successful Lean Agile transformation. In every episode of the LAMP, we ask industry thought leaders and top-tier management consultants to shine the light on the toughest issues in management. Learn how experts boost work efficiency, create a culture of high performance, reduce stress in the workplace, and help to build businesses that thrive. Lean Agile Management Podcast is presented by the leading Kanban software for Lean project management, Kanbanize.
Applying Lean and Agile Principles to Knowledge Management
“Do things, learn, reflect, adapt, change on the premise that (hopefully) we will go faster each time we do that because we are addressing the fundamental process issues.” Keith Howells, Project4 Learning Lab In this episode of our Lean Agile Management Podcast, we discuss how Lean/Agile principles can be applied to the knowledge work domain. Our guests today are Keith Howells and Angeline Thorne. Keith is a managing partner at Project4 Learning Lab and an experienced engineer with 20 years of operational leadership experience in the Aerospace, Defence, Energy, and Marine sectors. Angeline is a partner at Project4 Learning Lab with a track record of delivering sustainable improvements in business performance in senior leadership roles. Both experienced in business agility, program and portfolio management, leadership development, and change management, today they will share valuable insights on applying Lean and Agile from their practice. The topics discussed in this episode: * The benefits of practicing more discipline to project management by introducing the Lean pull system technique* What do digital and physical simulations bring to the surface?* The productivity paradox or how people confuse productivity with efficiency?* Where to start the transition from “pushing in more work” to “pull principle”?* What are some of the “push behavior” dysfunctions?* How to approach planning in project management? Learn more about: Project4 Learning Lab is a renowned organization specializing in leadership training, development, Lean and Agile consulting. Through the use of a holistic and sustainable approach to learning, P4 Learning Lab coaches guide leaders and organizations to deliver outstanding performance. * Project4 Learning Lab* LinkedIn Contact our guests: * Angeline Thorne * Keith Howells
Jun 30, 2021
39 min
Project, Program and Portfolio Management with Kanban
“Kanban scales in a way that does not require bureaucracy and brings coherence to all the actions in the company, because it is clear how decisions are made at all levels. “ Teodora Bozheva In this episode of the LAMP, we are talking about project, program, and portfolio management with Kanban with Teodora Bozheva. Teodora is an experienced Kanban consultant and one of the brightest minds in the Kanban community. She is an Accredited Kanban Trainer and Consultant with more than 15 years of experience leading organizational change initiatives.  Teodora is the founder and CEO of Berriprocess Agility. A company that provides training and guides you in the evolution of your project and service management practices, as well as your organizational culture. Teodora is also a co-author of Kanban Maturity Model: A Map to Organizational Agility, Resilience, and Reinvention and author of The Complete Guide for Project, Program, and Portfolio Management with Kanban. In this episode, we discuss: * Can companies use Kanban for Project, Program, and Portfolio Management? * What types of companies use Kanban for Project, Program, and Portfolio Management? * What makes Kanban suitable for different organizations? * Can Kanban be scaled? * What kind of challenges does Kanban solve? * How do companies apply Kanban?   Learn more about: * The Complete Guide for Project, Program and Portfolio Management with Kanban * Kanban Maturity Model: A Map to Organizational Agility, Resilience, and Reinvention Contact with our guest: * LinkedIn * Twitter
Jun 15, 2021
22 min
How to Fly Your Business at Portfolio Level
Managers often think they need to have agile teams so they could deliver projects faster. But this is a faulty kind of thinking. If you want to deliver faster as an organization, you need to take care of the end-to-end value flow. The question is where do you start? When you fly low, all you see are the little details and try fixing things at personal or team levels. When you fly hight, though, all you see is the bigger picture and general landscape. So how do we find the right way to look at our work? Learn on this episode of the Lamp with Klaus Leopold. -
Apr 23, 2018
30 min
Start managing work, stop managing people.
As the popularity of Kanban grows, so does the cloud of misconceptions and confusion around it. While many people will try convincing you that Kanban is better than Scrum (and vice versa), few can actually explain it in simple terms.  This time on the LAMP, we are joined by Andy Carmichael who helps us find the roots of Kanban. In its essence, Kanban is a way to see and manage your flow of work. All it really asks you to do is look at your work in a different way. Kanban lens helps to summarize that in just four elements. Tune in to learn how.
Apr 12, 2018
35 min
Portfolio Kanban: When It's Time to Scale Up
Is team Kanban really enough to achieve Business Agility? If you already practice Kanban, you are probably enjoying the visibility and efficiency it brings on the team level. However, the joys of having agility in a siloed team wear off quickly if the rest of the organization is inefficient and slow. The answer? Let me introduce you to Portfolio Kanban. Today on Lean Agile Management Podcast, we're talking about scaling Kanban to the organizational or the project portfolio level. Some like to say that Kanban is just for small teams. Our guest proves them wrong, as he works with groups as large as 1800 people. In this episode, you will learn how to apply Kanban end-to-end at the system level. We're talking today to Nader Talai, who is a professional IT manager, the organizer for the London Limited WIP Society and Business Agility Consultant at Value Glide. In this episode, he walked us through a range of hot topics about scaling Kanban to the portfolio level and making this a change that lasts. Here are the key questions we've covered: * How to make Business Agility a change that lasts? Stop focusing on practices and labels, think about the outcomes and results you are trying to achieve using Kanban or any other tool. Nader tells us how to adopt Portfolio Kanban with the positive outcomes and lasting change in mind. * What causes a high rate of expedite tasks and how to deal with them When your team is constantly putting out fires, you need to ask yourself what's the reason behind all of the expedite tasks? Nader walks us through the root cause behind the endless stream of "urgent" tasks. * Is Kanban effective only for small teams? Myth or reality? What kind of teams can benefit from Kanban? How can we use Kanban on portfolio level? * How to do less as an organization to achieve more?  Is it possible to effectively limit work in progress on the organizational level? How to achieve work predictability at the portfolio level with Kanban Pull? * The unexpected downsides of high resource utilization While it might seem like the most logical thing to do, aiming for 100% resource utilization (aka keeping everyone and everything busy) can be bad for your organization. We discussed how Portfolio Kanban lets us focus on and manage the Flow of work instead of simply keeping people busy. * Kanban planning: how to set up realistic goals and expectations With all the great promises Agile and Lean worlds offer, you might be tempted to "account for it" in your goal setting process. Nader brings up the topic of setting up the right expectations in Kanban planning. * Adopting Portfolio Kanban: how to get top management buy-in? Convincing stakeholders that changing the way teams or whole organizations work is not the easiest of tasks. In the interview, you'll learn how to get the top management buy-in for practicing Pull principle and Portfolio Kanban. Looking for more on the topic of Portfolio Kanban and scaling Kanban to the company level? Here are some useful resources on the topic: * What is Portfolio Kanban? * Implementing a Kanban Roadmap * What are WIP limits and how to use them to boost productivity * How to Set and Manage WIP Limits on Portf...
Jan 30, 2018
29 min
Clean Language: #1 Way to Fix Poor Team Communication
"Interpersonal communication is always complex. But in the kinds of environments we working in nowadays there seems to be a greater degree of complexity, a greater potential for misunderstanding, a greater potential for conflict. And that's where Clean Language comes in." - Judy Rees Today on Lean Agile Management Podcast, we're talking to Judy Rees about effective communication in complex environments to learn how to improve team communication at work using a method called Clean Language. Clean Language was initially devised by David Grove to help therapy clients explore their inner thoughts. In essence, it’s a very specific precision inquiry technique that’s built on the idea of probe request and response. The ultimate goal is to find out what it is that somebody really means by what they're saying even when they don't know themselves. From the famous feedback sandwich to a Nonviolent Communication method, managers everywhere are eager to find an effective way to overcome the communication hurdles of a modern workplace. Different cultural backgrounds, distributed and remote teams make it even harder for contributors and managers to communicate effectively. Wouldn’t it be great, if we could just glimpse into someone else's mind and just see why they do things the way they do? See what kind of meanings hide behind the words people say. The answer you’re looking for might be the Clean Language method. The key points covered in the episode: - The biggest challenge for modern management - How to communicate effectively in highly unstable and complex environments - Boosting team morale, company profits, and manager’s well-being with good communication - What is Clean Language and how can it help you deal with business challenges? - Giving feedback and understanding problematic employees - Importance of effective communication (listening) skills in conflict resolution - How to learn what's necessary for people to work at their best.
Jan 15, 2018
36 min
Business Agility is not an option. It’s a matter of business survival.
“Business Agility is not an option. It’s a matter of business survival.” - Jose Casal Will your business be around in 10 years or will you be replaced by a newcomer? How long does it take for your business to deliver a new product from the idea to the market?  If questions like these make you worried, it's probably time to talk about business agility. This time on Lean Agile Management Podcast, we are talking to Jose Casal, who is a Business Agility Coach with experience working in both private and public sectors. Jose is a public speaker, chairman of the Agile Methods Specialist Group at BCS Chartered Institute for IT and is the founder of Actineo Consulting. Business Agility is not an option. It’s a matter of business survival. In this episode: Understanding what Business Agility means in practical terms * Flow & Fit for purpose * Learning * Impact * People 3 Myths of Product Development vs 3 Facts of Agile Business Practices * Myth: Customers know what they want. Fact: The customers discover what they want as they go * Myth: We know how to build it. Fact: We only have an approximate idea of what we want to do. We don't know how we're going to deliver until you actually deliver. * Myth: Nothing's going to change. Fact: Everything will change. We should be expecting change. Culture of Discovery and Learning * The toxicity of "Follow me" culture vs discovering the right solution dynamically through discovery * In an Agile business, you need to be learning constantly. How are you learning? Managers should be the agile engine of learning and experimentation culture. * Allow people to make mistakes. The importance of psychological safety to make mistakes and let people try things. Little by little. Problems vs Solutions In traditional management and IT education, we are schooled to be constantly looking for solutions. Stop thinking about the solutions. First, we need to be better at understanding the problems, asking about the needs before we start offering solutions. How to achieve business agility? Which method is best? * Forget the methods - this is going back to thinking about a solution but what's the problem that you are trying to solve with that? * Why do we need to change? What's the better kind of world are you chasing? * We need a regular re-evaluation of our strategy. Traditional strategy lacks reflection, adaptation, engagement of the people who are delivering the change * The hardest thing to change in an organization is not the culture, process, or boss. How to approach change management as an agile business? * How can I encourage others to change? * How can I get people to do things differently? Missing out on Business Agility - the answer for the skeptics * Skipping agile? This is the start of a eulogy of your company * Old banks vs Agile financial companies. Who wins? Much smaller firms, which are fast to deliver, perform quick experiments are disrupting centuries-old banks * These little industry disruptors are out there to kill you and they will * No, it's not the matter of the industry. Banking, insurance and automotive industries are all going agile with or without you The future of business is agile by default. Business agility is not just an option anymore.
Dec 19, 2017
33 min
Transparency, And Why Business Agility Will Not Work Without It
Would you like predictability in your projects? Would you like to deliver faster and with higher quality? Business agility is no longer a dream of revolutionary organizations, it's the new requirement of the modern economy and free market. However, how do you get there? The key first step is transparency. This time on the LAMP, we are talking to Annette Vendelbo about the need for higher organizational transparency in business.  She is the director and founder of Xvoto, an accredited Kanban trainer and Agile coach, as well as a passionate public speaker on the topics of business agility and transparency. In this episode, you Annette explains why transparency is a quintessential part a healthy organization and why it is an unavoidable step towards real business agility. - Get your Free ultimate guide to Portfolio Kanban with practical examples https://kanbanize.com/portfolio-kanban-ebook/
Dec 5, 2017
34 min
How to Build and Execute a Strategy That Actually Works
"If from your strategy you can't identify anything that you would say no to, it's probably not a good strategy." - Karl Scotland Strategy Execution is Hard. Creating Strategy is Even Harder. Are you struggling with too many conflicting priorities? Constantly dealing with short-term unachievable targets that only send the whole team into a total burnout without any real result? You are not alone. Developing a strategy that leads to a successful execution is one of the biggest issues managers report to struggle with today. As revealed in a survey by PwC’s Strategy, which involved 2,800 executives from companies of various sizes, geographies, and industries, 82% of executives say that growth initiatives companies do commit to lead to at least partial waste. Converting strategic decisions into specific actions, allocating resources to support the success of the strategy, achieving an alignment of the day-to-day activities with the bigger objectives and strategic initiatives - all of these are the challenges managers and executives face every day. In this context, how can a leader build a successful strategy that would make sense at every level of business? Unfortunately, as stated in the same survey, almost half of the executives in question decided not to set a specific action at all - 49% stated their company has no list of strategic priorities. Is having no strategy really an answer? How to Build and Execute a Strategy to Get Real Results Today on Lean Agile Management Podcast, we are looking for a definitive answer to Lean-Agile strategy execution with Karl Scotland. Karl is a Strategy Deployment expert and a professional Lean and Agile consultant, who helped clients like BBC, Yahoo, Cisco, and others. In this episode: * How to create an end-to-end alignment of tasks, tactics, initiatives, and strategy? * How to give autonomy while avoiding a total chaos and unpredictability in execution? * How to use feedback to prevent second-guessing, deadly misunderstandings and unalignment? * Who is responsible for creating the strategy? * What, who and how comes up with the tactics and tasks? * How to execute strategy with a focus on true business benefits? * TASTE  * True North * Aspirations * Strategy * Tactics * Evidence * Using Hoshin Kanri X matrics to visualize the strategy and related work * Future backward exercise as a tool for breaking boxed thinking, draw out * How get people to buy-into the strategic ideas? * Continuous strategy and tactics adjustment and evaluation. How do we know our strategy is (not) working? * Failure is absolutely necessary to a strategic success, Why everyone needs to learn to fail Further reading and mentioned resources: * What is A3 problem-solving? * Understanding Lean model of shared leadership * Catchball as a tool for strategic feedback collection * What is Hoshin Kanri X matrix? * Free downloadable templates of X Matrix and A3's by Karl Scotland Book Recommendations by Karl Scotland: *
Nov 22, 2017
35 min
How to gain customer's trust with Service Delivery Review?
Who is your customer? Do you truly understand their pains and needs? Did you prove that with the way you build and deliver your products or design your services? The chances are, if you can give strong positive answers to these questions, your customers trust you. If that's so, you can go on to the next article. However, if you don't have clear answers to these questions, you are likely wondering how you can build a trust relationship with your clients. This week, we've asked Matt Philip, who is a Director of Learning and Development at ThoughtWorks, to explain us the concept of Service Delivery Review. → Download a free Service Delivery Review canvas: http://bit.ly/ep6-download-canvas → Read the blog full post: https://kanbanize.com/blog/how-to-gain-customers-trust-service-delivery-review → Learn more about Kanban: https://kanbanize.com/kanban-resources/ → Learn more about Lean Management: https://kanbanize.com/lean-management/
Nov 9, 2017
27 min
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