Over the years I’ve been leading the charge when it comes to creating mashups and hybrids of approaches such as Scrum, Kanban, SAFe, LeSS, whatever. Mashups and hybrids can be very attractive as they can be an excuse for taking what you like from each approach and leaving behind the hard stuff. In mashing up approaches you need to make sure whatever set of practices you end up with is cohesive and effective. Coming up with the smallest set of practices that is still cohesive and comprehensive and brings in the best of the Scrum iterative world and the Kanban flow-oriented world is a result of years of work in the trenches.
I recently started working with Steve Porter, Dave West, and others at Scrum.org as well as Daniel Vacanti of Actionable Agile on bridging the Scrum and Kanban worlds. We believe the time is right to put behind the arguments around which approach is better and help both Kanban and Scrum practitioners realize that actually they are stronger together.
Steve and Daniel wrote the first blog in the series — Scrum and Kanban — Stronger Together
I wrote the second one that was recently published — providing a Kanban primer for Scrum teams with concrete suggestions for practices you might want to add as experiments to your Scrum process.
Let me know what you think by leaving us a comment here on the blog.
PS If you’re interested to explore this in more depth in your organization – let’s talk. Helping Scrum teams add some Kanban/Flow to their mix is one of my favorite gigs :-)
UPDATE: On Feb 26 Scrum.org announced a new class — Professional Scrum w/ Kanban — That is one of the major goals we were working towards. We believe it can potentially become a significant bridge between the Kanban and Scrum worlds.