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

Patterns for getting to a lower WIP level in a system

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

The Freeze, No New Work, Limit Later, and some Mashups...

Some of us have the luxury of designing processes for greenfield systems meaning there is no history/legacy to deal with.

Typically though, we are dealing with Brownfield/Legacy systems – This usually means there is some work in the system already, there are outstanding commitments, and some existing queues between steps in our processes.

I’m working with several clients that decided to start using a Kanban system to manage their work, and believe Limited Work in Process is key to improving their performance.

But a challenge most of them share is how to deal with is something along the lines of:

  • We already have a commitment to deliver V10 with 20 features by end of October.
  • Our testing department is backlogged – its still dealing with the previous release V9 while development is already working on those 20 features for V10.
  • V10 is critical to the business.

We then discuss various ways to get from here to there.

The Freeze

Essentially prioritize all work. Anything that is in process but above the WIP limit, goes to the freezer – a new temporary lane/area where work is put on freeze until there is room for it.

The immediate effect would be an acceleration of all work inside the WIP limit, and significant risk to the commitment made about the frozen work. Yes, you say that the original commitment took all the work into account so why is there a risk just due to changes in parallelism? Well, because we focus on the higher priority work, the reality is that we might spend more effort on it, to deliver it with reasonable quality (not necessarily an attribute of previous releases…), we might spend more time investing in Versatility in order to sustain a lower more focused work in process limit. So, it would be prudent to negotiate the commitment level on a couple of lower priority features from the release… and give the business a heads up this might happen.

This is one of the fastest ways to achieve a new inventory/WIP level in the system. If we are looking to show quick results and are able to negotiate a temporary change in service levels with the business, this can be a great approach.

This strategy is elaborated in depth in the Theory of Constraints body of knowledge.

No New Work

This is a more evolutionary version – don’t freeze current work, but deny new work until we reach the desired work in process levels. This means anyone finishing work on something will look at how he can help someone else, instead of starting something new. There will still be effects on the release commitment, but milder ones.

The price we pay here is that it will take more time to reach the new inventory/WIP level. It’s easier to negotiate with the business, but the results will show more slowly…

Visualize now, Limit Later

This is even a more evolutionary version. You start with Kanban principle #1 – Visualize work. You don’t put any WIP limits for now. You see how work looks like, you try to manage WIP, but don’t limit it. Perhaps when negotiating commitments to the next release V11 you take into account a period of cleaning the system/queues and the implications of lowering the WIP, and at that point you go into a Freeze/No New Work period, with a bit more confidence in how this will look like, based on a few weeks/months of visualizing your work.

This clearly is the risk-averse approach. Just be careful of running out of improvement energies and forgetting that just Visualizing Work is not enough…

Differentiated Service

A tweak on all of the approaches above can be to treat different work types differently. This is what we call Classes of Service in Kanban.

For example, Normal work above the WIP limit will be frozen. Fixed date work will hopefully be inside the WIP limit and be allowed to finish. New Fixed date work can be allowed to start, with the condition that a Normal work will be frozen in exchange for introducing it. If all work currently in the system is Fixed Date, we can decide whether to allow the new Fixed date to start (should be a comfort zone for most organizations 😉 or to have a serious discussion with the business on the risks it introduces and how we want to address them.

We can also say we visualize all work, but limit specific types of work.

Feedback

What do you think about those approaches?

Which of the above did you find useful in real life?

Do you have other strategies for starting up in the real world?

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

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