Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.

4 Key Flow Metrics and how to use them in Scrum’s events

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

In the Kanban Guide for Scrum Teams and the Professional Scrum with Kanban workshop, we introduce 4 key flow metrics that we believe Scrum teams can use to improve their flow:

Work in Progress (WIP)

The number of work items started but not finished (according to the Scrum Team’s definition of “Workflow”).

Note the difference between WIP and the WIP Limit. The WIP Limit is a policy that the Scrum Team uses as a “constraint” to help them shape the flow of work. The goal of the WIP Limit is to reduce the amount of actual work in process (WIP). The team can use the WIP metric to provide transparency into their progress towards reducing their WIP and improving their flow.

While teams can directly visualize the WIP levels over time (which I recommend), most people use the Cumulative Flow Diagram to visualize the WIP.

Cycle Time

The amount of elapsed time between when a work item “starts” and when a work item “finishes.”

This metric is a lagging indicator of flow. It is available only after an item is actually finished from the workflow perspective (e.g. reached a Done lane on the Kanban board). It is typically used to drive improvement work as well as to be able to establish internal/external expectations as to the team’s turnaround time on specific items. The main chart/report used to visualize and analyze Cycle Times is the Cycle Time Scatterplot where teams can understand their Cycle Time trends, and distributions, and look at anomalies.

Throughput

The number of work items “finished” per unit of time.

Note the measurement of throughput is the exact count of work items, without any compensation for item size – which is a major difference between throughput and story-points based velocity. Throughput is measured at a certain step in the workflow, typically at the finish line of the workflow. Throughput can be visualized via a separate run chart or by looking at the angle of curves on a Cumulative Flow Diagram.

Work Item Age

The amount of elapsed time between when a work item “started” and the current time.

WIP and Cycle Time are classic metrics every Kanban practitioner is probably familiar with and throughput is somewhat similar to Velocity.

Work Item Age is the new guy on the block. Work Item Age complements Cycle Time. If Cycle Time is a lagging indicator only relevant for finished items, Work Item Age is a leading indicator only relevant for non-finished items. The basic idea is to provide transparency to which items are flowing well and which are sort of “stuck” even if not formally blocked.

I’ve been using some variant of this metric with most Kanban teams I’ve worked with. I also worked with several Kanban tool vendors to introduce some way to visualize card/item age.

Age on its own is interesting but not enough. We also want some indication of flow health. One common thing to visualize is the age in the current step in the workflow also known as “cards that didn’t move recently”.

Another way to look at it would be to look at the overall age but combine it with where the work currently is in the workflow as well as what the team expects their cycle time to be (We call that expectation Service Level Expectation (SLE) in the Kanban guide for Scrum teams and the PSK class). Combining all this information can help the team focus on the items that are at the most risk of missing the team’s expectations/SLE. For example, let’s say a team has an SLE of 16 days with 85% confidence. If one of the cards on their board has an age of 10 days, is that ok? is it a problem? The answer is that it depends. If that card is very close to the end of the workflow it is probably not a problem. If it is very close to the start of the workflow it is probably an indication of a problem that requires attention. The “Aging Work in Progress” chart below provides this perspective of both where active items are in the workflow, what the typical cycle times for this team are, and based on that which items are indications of flow risks (obviously orange-red means very low probability of finishing within the team’s flow expectations).

To sum up – Work Item Age is the best metric to look at if you want to determine when an item that has already started is going to finish. This is in contrast to an item that hasn’t started – where your best bet is your historical Cycle Times. The Service Level Expectation is just an expectation set by the team to themselves answering the question “What Cycle Time do we expect to see for an item of this type, and what is our confidence level for this?”.

Note: The charts above were created using the demo version of ActionableAgile Analytics – a tool created by my co-steward of the Professional Scrum with Kanban class – Daniel Vacanti. You can access the demo yourself and play with these metrics and think about how they would help your Scrum team.

Using the Flow metrics in the Scrum events

So how can these flow metrics be used to improve the Scrum events? This is one of the key learning objectives in the Professional Scrum with Kanban class. In a follow-up discussion with some of the Professional Scrum Trainers who attended last week’s class, we came up with a matrix mapping the metrics to the events. (credit Maarten Kossen)

I’ll explain –

Sprint Planning mainly leverages Throughput in order to create a realistic forecast for the Sprint Backlog. Work Item Age might be relevant when you have some items left over from the previous Sprint and you want to decide what to do about them.

The focus of Daily Scrum is the ongoing flow within the Sprint so naturally what we care about is what’s currently going on. Therefore, Current WIP and Work Item Age are the most important metrics in the Daily Scrum.

Sprint Review includes a review with stakeholders of both the Increment as well as overall flow behavior of the team – trends in Cycle Times and Throughput are interesting. Throughput can also be used as part of release planning/road-mapping discussions, especially when combined with Monte-Carlo simulations provide some better visibility/confidence into “What can be done by when”. NOTE: It is always important to emphasize that these are projections/forecasts, not commitments.

Sprint Retrospective is all about inspecting and adapting the process and the workflow. Therefore it is the place to look at WIP, Cycle Times, Throughput from a perspective of looking for areas to improve.

To learn more about flow metrics and how they can be used in a Scrum context, I really recommend joining a Professional Scrum with Kanban class.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

Agile
Certified SAFe
PI Planning
Product Management
Operational Value Stream
Pomodoro Technique
Slides
Scrum Master Role
Professional Scrum Master
Agile Games and Exercises
Development Value Streams
Agile Outsourcing
Kanban
Scrum
Systems Thinking
Continuous Delivery
Advanced Roadmaps
Team Flow
Professional Scrum Product Owner
Legacy Enterprise
Agile Assembly Architecture
EOS®
Sprint Retrospectives
Quality Assurance
Agile Israel Events
Risk Management in Kanban
NIT
Change Management
Self-organization
Atlassian
Daily Scrum
SAFe
Agile Techniques
Limiting Work in Progress
Scrum Values
speed at scale
Kanban Basics
Product Ownership
Program Increment
Portfolio for Jira
Built-In Quality
What Is Kanban
predictability
Lean Agile Management
ScrumMaster Tales
Principles of Lean-Agile Leadership
Lean and Agile Techniques
Continuous Integration
Lean Startup
AI
Agile Testing Practices
Managing Projects
System Integration Environments
Sprint Planning
Agile for Embedded Systems
Scrum Guide
Artificial Intelligence
Tools
Release Train Engineer
Process Improvement
Agile Release Planning
Agile Project
Scrum Primer
Agile Exercises
Enterprise DevOps
Hybrid Work
SA
Kaizen Workshop
Atlaassian
Agile Product Development
Software Development Estimation
Agile Israel
Agile Development
agileisrael
BDD
Releases Using Lean
Agile Risk Management
Nexus vs SAFe
IT Operations
Applying Agile Methodology
Acceptance Test-Driven Development
Entrepreneurial Operating System®
Lean-Agile Software Development
Agile and DevOps Journey
Agile Project Management
Agility
SAFe Release Planning
DevOps
User stories
Presentation
Large Scale Scrum
Lean Software Development
Agile Basics
Agile Program
Risk Management on Agile Projects
Managing Risk on Agile Projects
Effective Agile Retrospectives
An Appreciative Retrospective
Nexus
ALM Tools
Perfection Game
Reading List
Agile Marketing
Jira Plans
Agile Mindset
Amdocs
Accelerate Value Delivery At Scale
Agile Product Ownership
ART Success
RSA
System Archetypes
Planning
Scrum With Kanban
SPC
PI Objectives
Covid19
Scrum Master
lean agile change management
Kaizen
LPM
Kanban 101
Manage Budget Creation
ROI
Scaled Agile Framework
Agile Release Management
Agile India
Lean Budgeting
RTE
AgileSparks
GanttBan
Certification
RTE Role
Lean-Agile Budgeting
chatgpt
Webinar
Engineering Practices
Lean and Agile Principles and Practices
Business Agility
Lean Risk Management
Nexus and Kanban
System Team
LeSS
Test Driven Development
Value Streams
Games and Exercises
Rapid RTC
ATDD vs. BDD
ARTs
Continuous Improvement
Coaching Agile Teams
Scrum and XP
LAB
Agile Contracts Best Practices
Elastic Leadership
Lean Agile Leadership
Legacy Code
Lean Agile
Tips
Story Slicing
Nexus and SAFe
Implementing SAFe
ATDD
Introduction to ATDD
AI Artificial Intelligence
Implementation of Lean and Agile
The Agile Coach
Sprint Iteration
Lean Agile Organization
Scrum.org
Jira Cloud
Iterative Incremental Development
Agile Delivery
POPM
Continuous Planning
Code
WIP
Introduction to Test Driven Development
Achieve Business Agility
Kanban Kickstart Example
QA
Jira admin
Professional Scrum with Kanban
Video
speed @ scale
Kanban Game
Agile Games
Spotify
Keith Sawyer
Continuous Deployment
Frameworks
A Kanban System for Software Engineering
SAFe DevOps
The Kanban Method
Nexus Integration Team
TDD
Agile in the Enterprise
Software Development
Risk-aware Product Development
Lean Agile Basics
Jira
AgileSparks
Logo
Enable registration in settings - general

Contact Us

Request for additional information and prices

AgileSparks Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter, and stay updated on the latest Agile news and events

This website uses Cookies to provide a better experience
Shopping cart