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Visualizing more than just work with Kanban boards

Working at LeanKit is the first time I’ve seen all parts of a company use Kanban boards. I’ve seen some new uses of these visual boards for making information easy to obtain and some good examples of tracking things that don’t relate to our day jobs. Here are a few…

Curriculum maps

A Kanban board is all about visualizing information. Usually its about work and building a curriculum is also work. But, instead of visualizing that curriculum being built and having it flow through a process, I wanted to show the curriculum as a whole: units, lessons and modules in addition to accompanying information.

Managing your move

This is the Kanban board my husband and I used to manage our most recent move within Seattle. Not only did we prioritize the work via the board and track it through a process, we went one step further and used the cards to visualize how much the move was costing us through card sizing. When I click on the recently finished column, I can see the sum of the finished card sizes and get the overall cost of my move.

I could take it farther and set a WIP limit based on card size for my “Still paying off” lane in the recently finished column. This would help me control the amount of debt I might otherwise accumulate without noticing how far “in the hole” I was getting!

Books in progress

My daughter told me the other day that she never finished the books she reads. I asked her how she would feel if she finished a book. When she replied “awesome!,” I told her it was her lucky day because I was in the business of helping people finish things. So, we put up a physical board in my home office that tracks books she wants to read, books she is reading and books she recently finished. I asked her how many books she wanted to have “in progress” at one time and she said one so we put a WIP limit of one on the “books she is reading” column.

I’m happy to say she is now finishing books and is actively using her “reading tracker.”

Other uses that are a little different but I don’t have pictures to share

You get the picture. Once you start thinking about sharing information in a more visual way, you’ll be surprised at the ideas you or others will come up with.

Comment and tell me what you use visual boards to visualize!

 

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