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The Lean-Agile Way

You're reading from   The Lean-Agile Way Unleash business results in the digital era with value stream management

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835461877
Length 386 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Authors (3):
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Al Shalloway Al Shalloway
Author Profile Icon Al Shalloway
Al Shalloway
Cecil 'Gary' Rupp Cecil 'Gary' Rupp
Author Profile Icon Cecil 'Gary' Rupp
Cecil 'Gary' Rupp
Richard Knaster Richard Knaster
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Richard Knaster
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Building on Lean-Agile Foundations: Mastering the Basics
2. Chapter 1: Navigating Lean-Agile Transformations FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Solving Complex Business Problems with Agility 4. Chapter 3: Establishing Lean Flows to Improve Productivity 5. Part 2: Attending to our Value Streams: Prioritize Improvements by their Value-Added Impact
6. Chapter 4: Driving Improvements with Value Stream Management 7. Chapter 5: Introducing the VSM Implementation Roadmap 8. Chapter 6: Navigating Value Stream Optimization 9. Chapter 7: Connecting the Value Stream Network 10. Part 3: Achieving Lean-Agile and VSM Mastery: For Product-Oriented Business Transformations
11. Chapter 8: Implementing the Basic Lean-Agile Solution Team (BLAST) 12. Chapter 9: Defining a Business Agility System for the Enterprise (BASE) 13. Part 4: Driving Sustainable Transformation: Strategies to Achieve Lean-Agile Mastery
14. Chapter 10: Enhancing Decision-Making in the Lean-Agile Organization 15. Chapter 11: Implementing Strategies for Organizational Transformation 16. Chapter 12: Building Lean-Agile and VSM Mastery 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Optimizing Development Cadences and Value Deliveries

Cadences in Lean and Agile environments are not new concepts. Agile uses an Iterative and Incremental Development (IID) model to establish a rapid development and delivery cadence, exemplified by the Sprints in Scrum. In contrast, Lean focuses on value stream flows, with a production goal to establish a cadence that matches takt time. The German word takt means pulse or beat, conceptually aiming to align production capacities with customer demands.

This is where we begin to see inconsistencies between Scrum and Lean concepts of cadence. For instance, the Scrum Guide suggests a fixed length for Sprints of one month or less, emphasizing consistency in whatever length you choose. In contrast, Lean flows can vary significantly, being much quicker or longer depending on the size and complexity of the development effort. For example, tasks in a modern CI/CD line might be measured in seconds, minutes, or hours, while a Lean production...

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