This class is taught by a Certified Scrum Trainer but is not a certification course.
This interactive, hands-on course equips you with the essential lean concepts you need to know to improve your company beyond software development. Whereas agile is focussed on gathering requirements and transforming them into shippable software, lean thinking addresses the entire value stream, from identifying customer needs to satisfying them. This includes innovation and portfolio management, project approval processes, deployment, production support, sales and service.The course enables you to take a holistic view at your organisation’s processes. You will learn how to improve quality and productivity and reduce time-to-market and cost. You will leave the course with concrete improvement steps for your own organisation.
Objective
Understand how lean works and be able to apply lean principles to your own organisation to improve quality and productivity and to reduce time-to-market and cost.
Target Audience
Anyone interested in lean thinking, in particular Product Owners, ScrumMasters, IT/development managers, service and production support managers, test managers, quality and process managers.Prerequisites
The participants are required to have working knowledge of Agile software development such as Scrum. Additionally, you are requested to watch the video listed below prior to the class. Reading the book stated below will be greatly beneficial.Mary and Tom Poppendieck. Using Lean for Competitive Advantage. http://www.infoq.com/interviews/poppendieck-lean-2007
Jeffrey K. Liker. The Toyota Way. McGraw-Hill Education. 2003
Contents
The course is interactive and participatory. It uses exercises and encourages discussion. The contents include:
Introduction
- Lean Thinking and Agile Software Development
- The Roots of Lean Thinking
- Overview of Lean Thinking and Lean Software Development
- From customer needs to product delivery: The value stream
- The value stream mapping technique
- The current state value stream map
- Discovering and removing waste (Muda)
- Avoiding and resolving overburden (Muri)
- Removing unnecessary variation (Mura)
- Push vs. pull
- One-piece flow and just-in-time
- Takt time and cadence
- Workload levelling (Heijunka)
- Creating the future state value stream map
- Developing the improvement plan
- Empowerment and respect
- Teamwork
- See for yourself (Gentchi Genbutsu)
- Quality first (Jidoka)
- Continuous improvement (Kaizen)
- Visual controls (Andon)
- Standardisation
- Reflexion (Hansei)
| Dates: | 19 Sep 2008 |
|---|---|
| Location: | London, United Kingdom |
| Venue: |
Skills Matter Training Centre |
| Price: |
£600 |






