Which is the best online tool to manage a Scrumban (Scrum + Kanban) implementation?
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Depends what your team need to record. I use LeanKitKanban for my personal kanban board. I like the way you can split columns and move whole columns easily into the archive. I've also seen Rally's AgileZen work well in this space, and it looks as if it fits better onto larger monitors. Rally's support is also phenomenal. If I was choosing for an enterprise project this would be the one I tried first. I believe Thoughtworks' Mingle also supports WIP constraints but haven't tried it myself. They've fixed some of the early performance problems. I've used VersionOne. It does allow limited WIP, but merely turns columns red when you exceed it. I found the benefits for project managers far outweighed the benefits for the team, so wouldn't rate it. I recommend having a go with physical index cards and a board for a while, and find out what the team really want to record when things are as flexible as they can be. Then you'll have a better idea what kind of features you need from your online tool. Good luck! | |||||||||
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I recommend Trello, it is very simple and objective! In fact LEAN in all aspects! If you has a mix of multiple agile and lean initiatives the tool is flexible and minimalist to fit to this propose. In your particular case using Scrum, the trello not offer any extra feature to manage the kanban or productivity of your team. Cheers! | ||||
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This might help http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrum_%28development%29#Scrum-ban | |||
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If you are using Microsoft Team Foundation Server, the premier Scrum tooling for TFS is Urban Turtle. The latest version support a good mix of Scrum and Kanban. For example, in Urban Turtle task board, it is possible to transition multiple steps while being in the "In Progress" swim lane. Also, Urban Turtle will still work if you add or remove steps (value stream) in your TFS process template. Lastly, if you are serious about SCRUM and Kanban, do not build your own TFS process template, I strongly suggest that you start as a starting point with the Visual Studio Scrum template released by Microsoft in July 2010. Discloser: I work with the Urban Turtle team. So do not take my words. Instead, read what Brian Harry from Microsoft wrote in his blog a few days ago: "...awesome Scrum experience for TFS." You can read Brian Harry's blog post here. | ||||
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I've been trying out yet another kanban product for personal use and am absolutely loving this one. Feels lightweight and simple but actually packs in a fair amount of functionality at the same time. Try it out. | |||
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Carlos, As the answers you see above from Lunivore and Navi suggest, there isn't a best tool out there right now for a Scrumban team. It's a very DIY world at present. The main unsolved problem is the disconnect between backlog management (Like in Version One), powerful visualization (like in Leankitkanban) and a pleasing UI (Like in AgileZen). Since none of the electronic kanban tools have a decent API, it's difficult to build this monster as well. So, I'd ask a few questions:
If the answer to #1 is less than 100 people, the answer to #2 is yes, and the answer to # is less that "amazingly large" - then I'd agree with Lunivore and start with stickies on a white board. The tactile, always-on, immediately customizable nature of a physical board is very important. Having said that, I've used AgileZen and LeanKit to good effect. In fact, I use them almost every day. I've seen Kanbantool used well for groups as well. If you do go with an electronic board, I would highly recommend getting a huge monitor (like 60") to hang on the wall and take the place of a physical kanban. We've done this with many clients and the results have been very good. Hope this helps. Jim Benson | |||
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I'm involved in a project called ScrumDo that you may want to check out as well. It's targeted at scrum, but there's a "ScrumBoard" feature that's very kanban-like. | |||
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The main idea if ScrumBan is to filter work by iteration. TargetProcess supports this model nicely. I believe many tools like AgileZen or LeanKitKanban do not have Iteration concept at all, so they can't support ScrumBan naturally. | |||
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