• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Bringing You The Best Kanban Community Of Experts

AKT Materials

ALUMNI SIGN INSIGN OUT

Contact

Kanban University

Kanban University

Management Training, Consulting, Conferences, Publishing & Software

  • About
    • Kanban University
    • Contact Us
  • Courses
    • *NEW* Flow Manager Course
    • Team Kanban Practitioner
    • Scrum Better with Kanban
    • Kanban System Design
    • Kanban Systems Improvement
    • Kanban For Design and Innovation
    • Enterprise Scale Kanban
    • Kanban Maturity Model
    • Kanban Coaching
    • Kanban Train the Trainer
    • Change Leadership Masterclass
    • Kanban University Course Catalog
    • Submit a Request
  • Events
  • Resources
    • Kanban Merch Shop
    • The Official Guide to The Kanban Method
    • Kanban+ Online Learning Platform
    • Improve Your Scrum With Kanban Training
    • Kanban Books
    • What is the Kanban Method
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Blog
    • State of Kanban
    • Agility Without the Overheads Services
    • See All Resources
  • Our Network
    • Consultants – AKC
    • Trainers – AKT
    • Training Orgs – LTO
    • Alumni
  • Find Classes
You are here: Home / Kanban University / Kanban Cadences

Kanban Cadences

April 23, 2015 by David Anderson

Recently, I’ve taken a new approach to teaching The Kanban Method. The new Lean Kanban “Practicing the Kanban Method” class is built around the 7 Kanban Cadences – the cyclical meetings that drive evolutionary change and “fit for purpose” service delivery. Two of these meetings are relatively new additions to the method: Risk Review added in 2014 as a response to Klaus Leopold formalizing Blocker Clustering in 2013; and Strategy Review as an emergent response to the concept of “fit for purpose” and the need to sense the external environment, in order to be able to respond appropriately. The other 5 were existing elements of the method, though the first edition of my Kanban book ommitted Service Delivery Review. In truth our training has not until now emphasized these meetings and particularly replenishment/commitment and delivery planning have not been explicitly taught. Little wonder then that these very basic functions of Kanban have not been well implemented in the field.

Kanban Cadences

When implementing the 7 cadences we don’t expect people to add seven new meetings to their organizational overhead. Instead we expect to find existing meetings that change be adapted and tuned up. Also at smaller scale we expect the meetings to be combined. We’ve also got one client who combined SDR with Replenishment/Commitment because the audience was the same. However, the SDR is on a bi-weekly cadence while Replenishment is weekly. To facilitate the combination they simply increase the meeting time by 30 minutes every other week. Delivery Planning is covered in the Kanban book but is for the first time being emphasized separately in training. Showing that Replenishment and Delivery Planning are separate meetings emphasizes the deferred delivery commitment taught in the class and really helps to underscore differences with methods such as Scrum where the two are combined and coupled together. By decoupling commitment to service a request from commitment to a specific delivery date, you can increase customer satisfaction by better managing their expectations and making promises you know you can keep. It’s been an important element of Kanban since 2006 and finally we are making it more  explicit in our training.

There are 10 feedback loops on this diagram showing information flow and change request flows between the different meetings. Information flow is intended to facilitate decision making for example, output from a replenishment meeting would appear as information at a standup meeting. Change requests imply that something is not working well enough, that there is perception that some current policy is leading to an outcome that isn’t “fit for purpose,” for example, both SDR and Ops Review will provide capability information to a Strategy Review together with a requets for a change of strategy due to a lack of operational capability to deliver on current strategy.

Filed Under: Kanban University Tagged With: Feedback Loops, Kanban, KanbanESP

RSS Kanban University

  • New in 2025: Role-based Management Credentials March 24, 2025
    Discover the latest insights, blogs, webinars, and more in the May issue of New & Views from the Kanban Community. Stay informed with the newest happenings and thought leadership in the industry.
    Rosie
  • May News & Views from the Kanban Community May 29, 2024
    Discover the latest insights, blogs, webinars, and more in the May issue of New & Views from the Kanban Community. Stay informed with the newest happenings and thought leadership in the industry.
    Rosie
  • How You Can Scrum Better With Kanban May 22, 2024
    Are you using Scrum and still running into walls around challenges like dependencies, delays, and resistance to changing and improving the way the team works?
    Rosie

Footer

Kanban University
7941 Katy Frwy, #33, Houston, TX 77024, USA
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy

© 2024 Kanban University. All rights reserved. Accredited Kanban Trainer and Kanban Coaching Professional are registered trademarks of Kanban University.