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Committing to work in Kanban is known as Kanban Replenishment. Check out our detailed guide to learn more about the whole process and its best practices.
In traditional project management, making decisions on what work to execute next is predominantly the project manager’s responsibility. This involves push tactics that often result in overburdening team members and creating unevenness in the work process.
In Kanban, however, things happen differently. To decide what to work on next, we follow the Kanban replenishment process.
Kanban replenishment is the process of replenishing a team’s pipeline with fresh, new work to be executed next. It’s a pull-based model where team members collaboratively decide what work items they can commit to delivering. For this to be done, all the details about those work items need to be clear.
Doing replenishment in Kanban provides more clarity to the work process and creates a shared understanding among stakeholders about what is being worked on and when. This improves the flow of information on any given project. It also keeps team members focused on the most critical work that needs to be done. As a result, your team's likelihood of delivering a product or service successfully to the market increases significantly.
However, before a work item can be pulled for execution, there needs to be a clear signal in the system that your team is ready to start working on it. This happens with the help of a dedicated Replenishment commitment point.
In Kanban, teams commit to a work task when there is a strong conviction by everyone that it will be of value to the client, and it will get “done” successfully. The point in the process where a work item goes from an uncommitted to a committed state (typically as a result of a Replenishment meeting, which will be discussed below) is known as a Replenishment commitment point. You can establish and visualize it with the help of the Kanban board.
There, the point at which your team commits to a given task is represented by a line between columns. Usually, that is the line between the Backlog and the “To Do”/”Ready to Start”/”Selected” column on the board. Once a work item crosses it, this creates a signal that the team has a clear understanding of what needs to be done and agrees to start working on the task.
However, in some cases, work items or customer requests need to be refined before they proceed to execution. This is especially true for bigger companies where two separate teams might be responsible for the refinement and execution processes.
In Kanban, for example, teams are refining options and gathering knowledge about them in a Discovery (Upstream) process, while the execution of the work happens in a Delivery (Downstream) process.
With that being said, many of the work items might have to go through an Upstream process before the actual work commitment occurs. Sometimes, this can create a problem of either overloading or starving the Downstream process out. To prevent that, make sure to apply the best practices described below.
Once your replenishment commitment point is visualized on the Kanban board, you should apply WIP (Work In Progress) limits to it. This will allow you to control the number of work items your team members can pull into execution until the next replenishment cadence.
As a result, you will create a more stable and predictable work system, ensuring that whatever comes in eventually leaves. Furthermore, you will have the means to protect your Downstream process from overburdening, and this way, improve your team’s throughput.
Another best practice when creating a replenishment commitment point is establishing a minimum order point on your Upstream processes. In contrast to overloading, this will help shield your Downstream workflow from starving for lack of input.
Applying that in practice, might sound pretty hard. However, it doesn’t have to be, as long as you have the right tooling in place.
Our teams, for example, do that by using an automation rule which counts all the Kanban cards that they have in a given Upstream process. Once the number drops below a specific threshold, that’s a signal, and they need to replenish their Upstream systems to keep up with the Downstream pace of work.
With that being done, you will have yourself a fully functioning work commitment point that you can now start to replenish. To do that in Kanban, we hold a Replenishment & Work Commitment meeting.
The Replenishment meeting is one of the 7 Kanban cadences, essentially feedback loops that help you align business communication. Its main purpose is to engage your team members in the decision-making process of what work they should commit to delivering in the execution process.
Kanban cadences
Here is the place to quickly clarify something before we continue talking about the Replenishment meeting.
Many teams are tempted to introduce it separately in their organization. However, that might not be the most productive decision, especially if you already have too many meetings. That’s why we recommend first looking for a way to incorporate it into some of your existing ones. If that doesn’t work, then you can introduce it as a standalone meeting.
With that being said, before conducting the Replenishment meeting, you should keep a few things in mind to make it most effective. Let’s briefly discuss them below.
This is one of the most important things that you need to determine. Are you going to replenish the commitment point with new work weekly, bi-weekly, or maybe once a month?
This decision will solely depend on the nature of your work process, the batches of work, and how fast your team can release them. The best practice here is to keep those batches as small as possible, so you can increase your team’s throughput and deliver value more frequently to the market.
That’s pretty straightforward, but you need to establish what options are available and discuss it at the meeting. A good practice is to keep the most important work items (those with higher urgency, for example) higher up the backlog, so your team discusses them first.
Last but not least, you need to determine who will participate at the Replenishment meeting. In the beginning, a good practice is to hold it internally for the team where you collaboratively decide what work items to commit to delivering next.
However, as your organization advances in its Kanban maturity, you might invite other relevant stakeholders to participate or even a customer whose project you are working on. Doing this will allow you to create higher-level transparency of what’s happening in the work process and what value your customer is going to receive next.
Once you answer the questions above, you can go ahead and conduct an effective Replenishment meeting. The main objectives of it can be summarized below:
for outcome-driven enterprise agility.
In Summary
To create an effective Kanban replenishment process, you need to establish a work commitment point in your process and conduct a Replenishment meeting. As a result of the Replenishment meeting, you should:
Michaela Toneva
SEO & Content Creator | Agile Practitioner
With a never-ending thirst for knowledge and a passion for continuous improvement, Michaela is an Agile practitioner with a good understanding of Kanban, Lean, and Agile methodologies. Her professional background includes SEO and content writing with a dose of sales and a pinch of social media.
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