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David Anderson

ESP compared to Kanban Method

April 23, 2015 by David Anderson

I’ve been giving some careful thought to why it became necessary to create the concept of Enterprise Services Planning.

At the most fundamental level, ESP was necessary to provide a container for the collection of things we were teaching that were beyond kanban systems and beyond the scope of the Kanban Method. These were the things that enabled the optimal and effective use of kanban systems – topics such as: probabilistic forecasting and statistical analysis; qualitative risk assessment; real option theory; connecting strategy to operational mechanisms such as Kanban capacity allocation; and so forth. ESP represents a system of management for an entire professional services business. It isn’t just an IT thing and it certainly isn’t just for operational management of a single service delivery workflow. So we needed a name that encompassed concepts that were a lot bigger than Kanban.

The second reason is that we needed a concept and a message that resonated with senior executives – something that would help them understand why they should care about Kanban and what it might do for them. Enteprise Services Planning seem to fit that bill. The focus on “fit for purpose” and evolutionary change based on sensing the external environment and responding to changes on the outside with changes on the inside, seems to appeal to senior executives.

This led me to the conclusion that Enteprise Services Planning (ESP) is intended to be implemented Top-Down and is focused from the Outside-In.

The truth of the Kanban Method, as those who’ve attended a coaching masterclass will tell you, is that it was intended and designed as “change led from the middle.” It was a method to effectively lead and implement successful change for middle managers not endowed with large budgets, significant power, and a mandate for a large scale change initiative. However, we have to recognize that the working reality of Kanban adoption around the world is that it is largely Bottom-Up and from  the Inside-Out. We even address this in our scaling advice when we talk of first scaling up and down the value-stream. The assumption is that the most likely proto-kanban implementation is focused on the middle of a end-to-end service delivery workflow. The input to the proto-kanban isn’t coming from the direct customer but is a hand-off from an upstream partner, and often the delivery from the system isn’t directly to the original requestor either but to a downstream partner who may batch things for delivery.

So Kanban has been Bottom-Up and Inside-Out while we anticipate Enterprise Services Planning to be Top-Down and Outside-In. This means we anticipate a whole different approach to selling ESP in comparison to selling Kanban. We also expect the approach to training and adoption to be different. Initially we are only offering ESP training privately directly to clients on their premises, while Kanban training is extensively open registration and easily delivered to mixed groups from many employers.

We also anticipate the adoption of the Kanban Cadences to be different. With ESP we expect to start at the top and lead with strategy. This diagram shows the anticipated adoption sequence of Kanban Cadence meetings during an ESP initiative.

kanbanespcadenceadoption

If we compare this to the expect adoption for a typical Kanban initiative, you can see how different it appears

kanbanmethodcadenceadoption

With Enterprise Services Planning, Kanban (represented by the Replenishment/Commitment, Standup and Delivery Planning meetings) comes last, as we don’t automatically assume that use of kanban systems is the solution to “fit for purpose” service delivery and a more successful business. We start by understanding the problem from the business perspective in terms of what businesses and markets do they wish to be in, and from the customers’ perspective in each of those market segments.

With Kanban, initial shallow adoption has tended to be internally focused and intended to provide relief from overburdening and to smooth unevenness in flow. The benefits to the customer are potentially coincidental. The motivation is usually to make things easier for the workers. With ESP the focus is explicitly on the customer and the business strategy right from the start.

Filed Under: ESP Tagged With: Enterprise Services Planning, Kanban, Kanban Method, KanbanESP

LKNA15 Miami – The Kanban Practitioner Conference

April 5, 2015 by David Anderson

This year we’re taking our LeanKanban North America conference back to Miami for the first time in 6 years. It’s very much a “back to our roots” event as we held our first Kanban conference in 2009 at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel on Miami’s Brickell Key island. This year we’re on Miami Beach at the historic Eden Roc Hotel. This year our focus is on practicing Kanban and scaling that practice with Enterprise Services Planning. While we are going “back to our roots” as a pure Kanban event, we are also “looking to our future” with large scale implementation and the unveiling of Enterprise Services Planning guidance, content, training and software.

Once again and for the 7th time Ultimate Software of Ft. Lauderdale/Weston Florida are sponsoring. Ultimate embraced Kanban as a key part of how they manage their business in 2008 and Kanban at Ultimate has grown as has the company. Known as “the Google of South Florida” Ultimate is a destination employer in the region and Kanban plays a key role in making them an attractive place to work and a business focused on superior customer services and outpacing their competition. It’s fantastic to have the continued support of Ultimate and I very much appreciate a business that feels a tremendous benefit from using Kanban, giving back to a wider community and encouraging others to adopt and extend their practice through attending the conference.

This year we’ve been listening more to our core audience. You’ve been asking for more pragmatic sessions with actionable guidance for practitioners. We’re providing that. This year for the first time in perhaps 5 years, our conference is very much the Kanban User Conference. If you’re looking to take your practice of Kanban to the next level, we have the sessions, content and guidance for you!

The LeanKanban brand has always stood for “pragmatic, actionable, evidence-based guidance” and we intend to really deliver this year. Lean Kanban North America is the event for you to learn the next set of practices and techniques to take your service delivery to the next level. Manage your business better with Kanban, learn how in Miami June 8-10!

Check out this year’s program. If you want to know how to use Kanban to improve service delivery in your business we have the content for you. If you want to know how to take your management practice to the next level, we have the content for you. If you want to know how to scale the success of Kanban from one service delivery workflow to a whole organization or business unit then we have the content for you!

Get to mix and mingle with Brickell Key Award nominees past and present and many past recipients of the award. Meet many of Kanban Coaching Professionals (KCPs) and Accredited Kanban Trainers (AKTs). This is your chance to learn from the best in the most cost effective manner. Stay for the 3rd day and attend the in-depth half day workshops with thought leaders such as Donald Reinertsen.

Filed Under: KU Education

LKNA15 Miami – Enterprise Services Planning – the Future of Kanban

April 5, 2015 by David Anderson

Lean Kanban North America takes place in Miami, Florida 8-10 June 2015 at the Eden Roc Hotel on Miami Beach. This year we are both going “back to our roots” while “looking to the future” with a very specific Kanban practitioner event. If you are already doing Kanban and want to know how to take your practice to the next level, or you are curious how to scale the benefits to your entire organization or a business unit, or you just want to know how to apply Kanban outside of IT and software development, then this is the event for you!

In 2015 we launched Enterprise Services Planning, a management system for creative and knowledge worker industries that encourages improved service delivery, better customer satisfaction and a business that is “fit for purpose.” Are you curious about Enterprise Services Planning and how it leverages Kanban to improve your business? Are you curious to see the latest Enterprise Services Planning software solutions? You need to be in Miami this June at Lean Kanban North America. We’re back to our roots in the same city as our first conference in 2009, while we look to the future with the enterprise-wide management solution, Enterprise Services Planning (ESP). We’ll have a full pavilion of vendors offering ESP solutions – come and see the latest software and learn about our new modular 5-day training program in ESP.

wp_20150325_15_25_59_pro_1

Your business is an ecosystem of interdependent services. You can learn to manage these better with Enterprise Services Planning. ESP is about scheduling and sequencing work, forecasting delivery dates and outcomes, allocating capacity and managing dependencies, understanding risk and learning how to hedge it and embrace it for opportunity and economic benefit. Learn to run an effective, risk managed, business, that produces superior customer service and both “fit for purpose” and robust & resilient to a rapidly changing external environment, using ESP. Enterprise Services Planning is the new way to manage your complex, modern 21st Century business. ESP software solutions make it easy to translate what you learn into action. Come to Miami and experience how the future of work will be managed.

Filed Under: ESP Tagged With: Conference, Enterprise Services Planning, Kanban, KanbanESP, Leadership, LeanKanban North America, LKNA, Management, Management Training

The Meaning of Kanban From the Inside

March 11, 2015 by David Anderson

Kanban from the inside! What does that mean?

Perhaps it’s about practicing Kanban and it is written by a practitioner? And that would be true!

Perhaps it’s about understanding Kanban and its community of followers from a community insider? And that would be true too!

Or perhaps it is about something deeper, something truly “from the inside”, from inside the author? Kanban from the heart? Kanban from the soul? Kanban expressed by a deeply spiritual person with a strong sense of self and a deeply held set of values?

Mike Burrows was an early adopter of Kanban and an early member of our online community. It helped him do his job. It helped his organization get work done, manage risk better and improve their performance. It was a solid and effective management technique. It was a useful professional tool for a middle manager with operational responsibilities.

In 2010, Mike Burrows attended the Kanban coaching masterclass and like others before him and who’ve come since he described it as “life changing.” He left with the ephinany that the Kanban guidance he’d been following was rooted in a set of values – values that I wasn’t communicating explicitly. They were values that resonated with someone who quietly follows his religious beliefs. In many ways a private person, Kanban had touched him in a way he didn’t expect.

Since then Mike has dedicated his professional career to the development of Kanban and significantly to makinge its underlying values explicit. Mike has helped to expand the “Why” of Kanban. He’s helped to humanize it and to explain how it represents “change that is humane.” He’s become a highly respected leader in our community. I’m proud to know him and proud to call him a colleague. It gives me great pleasure that we could publish his book, Kanban from the Inside. I know how much it all means to him.

Kanban from the Inside will help you understand why you should care about Kanban and how Kanban and its community care about you. It is also packed with much of the latest guidance, teaching tools, explanations and experience that otherwise you can only access through training classes.

Yes, Kanban is a useful management method for delivering creative and knowledge work services. Yes, Kanban is an effective way to drive improvement in an evolutionary way. Yes, the techniques in this book will help improve the operational performance of your business. Kanban is all of those things and Mike shows you how to make it happen. But let Mike take you further. Discover the soul of Kanban. Discover what is inside! Get Kanban from the Inside! It’s a great read and well worth your investment. Discover a new deeper way to connect with the concepts in the Kanban Method.

Filed Under: Foundations Tagged With: Enterprise Services Planning, Kanban, Kanban Inside, KCP, Values

LeanKanban Training Roadmap 2015 Edition

February 23, 2015 by David Anderson

We’ve updated the LeanKanban Training Roadmap for 2015 following the introduction of the modular 5-day Enterprise Services Planning class.

edu.kanban.com_training_roadmap

2015 Edition LeanKanban Training Roadmap

The new training roadmap includes the new Enterprise Services Planning classes but also introduces a new intermediate training class called “The Kanban Method.” People completing the Foundation Level “Getting Started with Kanban – Improving your Service Delivery” class together with the Advanced Practitioner Level “The Kanban Method – Success Evolutionary Change for Your Technology Business” will receive the Kanban Management Professional (KMP) credential.

As has been the case for the past 3 years, Accredited Kanban Trainers (AKTs) are free to offer a 1-day informational class tailored to specific audiences. These introductory classes are designed to deliver Kanban awareness. There is no set curriculum for these classes. AKTs are free to construct a curriculum that in their opinion is best tailored to their audience and delivers the right level of Kanban awareness based on the job function of the attendees. Certificates of attendance are issued.

The “Getting Started with Kanban” Foundation Level class is now standardized for all new AKTs. The curriculum is defined and trainers use the standard training materials issued from LeanKanban University. Trainers are permitted to customize the training by localizing it into their own language and by adding their own case study. This 2-day class is designed to teach the basic mechanics of Kanban and let participants experience Kanban in action through the getKanban game simulation and the STATIK (Systems Thinking Approach to Implementing Kanban) Method exercises for analysis, design and implementation of a kanban system and visual boards. Certificates of attendance are issued to all attendees who complete this 2-day class.

The new “The Kanban Method – Successful Evolutionary Change for Your Technology Business” class at the Advanced Practitioner Level is designed for people with basic knowledge and experience using Kanban. This class focuses on the 7 Kanban Cadences: Replenishment; Delivery Planning; Standup; Service Delivery Review; Operations Review; Risk Review; and Strategy Review. The objective of this class is to teach the full method and encourage deeper implementations. Candidates will learn how the Kanban Method provides an anti-fragile solution through its feedback mechanisms that are designed to respond to stressors by catalyzing improvements.

“The Kanban Method” class has a standardized curriculum and standard training materials. Trainers are permitted to localize the training materials into their local language. All AKTs can offer this advanced practitioner class.

Certificates of attendance are issued for each candidate completing the 2-day “The Kanban Method” class.

For those who complete both 2-day classes, “Getting Started with Kanban” and “The Kanban Method” they will be awarded the Kanban Management Professional (KMP) credential.

Three parallel tracks are then offered: Enterprise Services Planning; Kanban Coaching Masterclass; Kanban Train-the-trainer.

Enterprise Services Planning is designed for managers from line level to senior decision makers who must worry about enterprise scale concerns, customer satisfaction and fitness for purpose. Enterprise Services Planning is designed to delivery practical solutions for pragmatic practitioners.

The Kanban Coaching Masterclass is a step towards receiving the Kanban Coaching Professional (KCP) credential. KCPs must complete the masterclass, demonstrate at least 6 months Kanban coaching experience through a case study essay and a panel interview. The KCP track is designed for people who wish to lead or coach Kanban and Enterprise Services Planning initiatives with their employer or clients.

The Kanban Train-the-trainer is a class that teaches trainers how to deliver the Kanban training classes, “Getting Started with Kanban” and “The Kanban Method”. Attendees completing the train-the-trainer are awarded the Accredited Kanban Trainer (AKT) credential. Only AKTs are licensed to deliver official LeanKanban training.

Filed Under: KU Education Tagged With: Accredited Kanban Trainer, AKT, Enterprise Services Planning, Kanban, Kanban Coaching Professional, KanbanESP, KCP, LeanKanban, Training

Enterprise Services Planning: Module 1 – Portfolio Management

February 22, 2015 by David Anderson

Enterprise Services Planning is a new modular 5-day training curriculum for managing modern businesses involving lots of knowledge work and creative services. If your organization contains people who must think and make decisions for their living then Enterprise Services Planning is the management training framework that will transform your business. While ideally taken together as 5 days of intensive emersion, ESP training is offered in 4 modules.

esp_map_large

Map of the Enterprise Services Planning Framework

Enterprise Services Planning: Module 1: Portfolio Management

Training class for up to 24 attendees

Duration: 2 days

Pre-requisites: Informational level knowledge of kanban systems and their application to knowledge work and creative services workflows

Target Audience

“I am a business leader who needs to understand the dynamics of our environment in order to make better decisions about what to start, when to start them and the likelihood of a successful and desirable outcome for our business and our customers”

“I am a portfolio manager who needs to make decisions about risk and capacity allocation, decide when to start projects and initiatives and manage our portfolio of concurrent projects, initiatives and activities.”

“My job is to manage risk for our organization and advise our leaders and the management team in our PMO”

“I work in the PMO and I want to be more effective in my job. I’m overwhelmed and overburdened and I’m looking for simpler, more powerful ways to make decisions, take actions and work with project stakeholders.”

Curriculum

Day 1 – Fitness for Purpose & Cost of Delay

  • Blizzard Skis case study
  • Defining Fitness for Purpose
  • Defining Fitness Criteria Metrics (KPIs)
  • Classes of Service and alignment with market segments and fitness criteria
  • Qualitative assessment of Cost of Delay
    • Market payoff function
    • Defining cost of delay
    • Cost of Delay function shapes
    • Cost of Delay impact assessment
    • Shelf life

Day 2 – Scheduling, Sequencing, Risk & Strategic Alignment

  • Scheduling work
    • optimal start time
    • window of opportunity
  • Sequencing
  • Portfolio Risk
  • Hedging Risk
  • Risk Profiling
  • Pragmatic Philosophy for Risk Management
  • Aligning Strategy with Capability
  • Implementing a regular Strategy Review

Learning objectives

Understanding evolutionary improvement of service delivery by applying evolutionary theory to development of fitness criteria metrics (or, key performance indicators (KPIs)) by understanding what creates “fit for purpose” service delivery based on customer needs and expectations.

Understanding use of classes of services to serve specific market segments and sources of demand to enable delivery within expectations and against the defined fitness criteria metrtics

Understanding cost of delay as a concept and knowing how to classify it in a qualitative and pragmatic fashion using taxonomies

Understanding how to apply cost of delay and lead time capability sensitivity analysis for scheduling. Learning how to determine earliest start, latest start and optimal start dates for requested work

Understanding how to use market role risk assessment to sequence work in large batch commitments (such as projects)

Understanding how to assess portfolio risk based on strategic contribution and market lifecycle stage

Understanding how to hedge portfolio risk using capacity allocation in kanban systems

Understanding how to develop a multi-dimensional risk profile for portfolio or project level use and how to visualize it and use the visualization to inform scheduling and option selection/discard decisions

Learn the 12 point pragmatic approach to risk assessment

Understand appropriate alignment of service delivery capability with strategy and risk hedging allocation

Understand the purpose of a regular Strategy Review to assess market segments, fitness criteria, risk hedging policies and alignment of strategy, risk management policy and service delivery capability

As an entire outcome attendees will have learned how to select work for a portfolio, how to align a portfolio of work with company strategy, how to insure that strategy is aligned with capability, how to schedule and sequence work within the portfolio, and how to hedge risk across the portfolio

Who should attend?

Portfolio and program managers, project managers, service delivery managers, risk managers, those responsible for corporate governance, product managers, marketing managers and strategic planners, senior executives and those responsible for strategy, risk policies and strategic decision making, management trainers, management and executive coaches, anyone interested in resilience and survivability of their business and those responsible for service delivery to customers.

Applicability

This class is ideally suited to a single corporate for private delivery on premises. Typical scope should be a medium-sized entity or a product or business unit of a larger entity. The class is most suitable for the private sector but is adaptable to public sector environments.

Sales

For open registration classes please consult our training listings If you don’t see a class listing near you please contact our sales department via the link at the bottom of the page

For private classes please contact sales.

Filed Under: ESP Tagged With: Enterprise Services Planning, Fitness for Purpose, Kanban, KanbanESP, Portfolio Management, Scaling, Strategy, Training

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