Limiting Work in Progress (WIP) – some anecdotes worth thinking about when using Kanban with Scrum

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

Co-Creating and teaching the new Scrum.org Professional Scrum with Kanban class has given me an opportunity to get back to geeking out on WIP limits, flow metrics, and all things Kanban. And it’s been fun!

One of the key Kanban practices is Limiting Work in Progress. If you want to be pedantic, actually what this practice aims for is Reducing and stabilizing Work in Progress. This improves flow, provides predictability, and is actually even more important for creating a pull-based Kanban system than visualizing your workflow using a Kanban board. I worked with several clients who limited their WIP but didn’t use Kanban boards. One could argue that maybe this practice deserves to be first in the list of Kanban practices, ahead of Visualization.

Anyhow, when a Scrum Team implements Kanban they should definitely figure out how to limit and reduce their Work in Progress. This is a key part of their definition of “Workflow”. First of all, when we say flow we mean flow of valuable items – so flow of PBIs (rather than tasks).

Now, a question comes up: Who should define the WIP Limit? Let’s assume the team is using Kanban to improve the Sprint flow by visualizing and managing flow in the Sprint Backlog. Sprint Backlog is owned by the Development Team so it would make sense for them to own their workflow and specifically the WIP limits in this case.

What if the team is using Kanban from a more holistic perspective, starting from the Product Backlog and including refinement work as well? In this case, it would be the Scrum Team that would own the workflow and therefore would need to discuss WIP limits.

Now, what if the Dev Team actually wants to involve the Product Owner in their Sprint flow – e.g. to review and accept a story during the Sprint before it goes through testing? Who decides whether to do this? Who owns the Sprint Backlog in this case? I think it is the Scrum Team.

Ok, so we understand who defines workflow and therefore WIP limits. Now let’s assume a team is mid-Sprint and there’s an important valuable item the Product Owner wants to add to the Sprint Backlog. It is aligned with the Sprint Goal. The team is currently at its WIP Limit. Could they add this item? Should they? What needs to happen to the WIP limit?

My take on this is that first of all a decision needs to be made on whether to pull this item into the Sprint Backlog. This discussion isn’t related to Kanban at all. It is a core Scrum question and the answer is that it is up to the team to agree to pull a new item into the Sprint Backlog. The Sprint Goal can be used to assess how aligned this item is with the current focus.

In case the item is pulled into the Sprint Backlog, then the Dev Team needs to figure out whether they can actually start it right away. This depends on the WIP limits and the current WIP. If the team is at their WIP they shouldn’t pull in that new item until some room frees up. If their backlog items are pretty small, an empty WIP slot will free up pretty quickly. If items are big, it can take a while.

The longer it might take to get a normal pull slot ready, the more pressure there might be to actually expedite this card. What is expediting? going beyond the current WIP limits and pushing this item along on top of the existing flow. The typical way to do this is NOT to change the WIP limit definition but to go above WIP and note a WIP exception. These exceptions can then be a topic for inspection and adaptation come time to retrospect.

In general, I don’t recommend changing WIP limits on a whim just because there seems to be a need during the Sprint. I’d rather see an exception and discussion rather than hide the problem under a policy change. Most of the time, Scrum Teams should adjust WIP limits during the Sprint Retrospective out of an attempt to create a better flow strategy, not a way to manage at the tactical level. This is similar to the definition of Done. We don’t change the definition of Done during a sprint just because we have a problem creating a Done Increment. We note the exception, maybe even fail to create a really Done Increment, and we discuss the definition during our Retrospective.

One last thing to note about limiting WIP is that while we typically talk about limiting WIP as per-lane constraints on your workflow, this is actually just one specific way to do it. You could limit the amount of work in progress per person, per the entire team throughout their workflow, or actually, you could limit WIP by time. E.g. “we won’t work on more than 10 items this week”. Hey – that sounds familiar! #SprintForecast.

NOTE: Updated to emphasize that we want to limit WIP by valuable PBIs (rather than tasks). Thanks, Giora for suggesting to make that explicit.

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

Sprint Planning
Built-In Quality
Large Scale Scrum
QA
AI Artificial Intelligence
POPM
Agile India
Applying Agile Methodology
The Agile Coach
Video
Continuous Delivery
Nexus
Program Increment
Confluence
Advanced Roadmaps
RTE Role
Risk Management in Kanban
Agile Israel Events
AgileSparks
Planning
Introduction to Test Driven Development
Scrum Master Role
The Kanban Method
Agile Project
Kanban Kickstart Example
Lean-Agile Software Development
Reading List
Introduction to ATDD
Hybrid Work
Agile Exercises
WIP
Implementing SAFe
Rapid RTC
Agile Project Management
Kaizen Workshop
Risk-aware Product Development
System Team
Agile Delivery
Effective Agile Retrospectives
Releases Using Lean
Lean Risk Management
Sprint Retrospectives
SA
Managing Risk on Agile Projects
Quality Assurance
DevOps
Continuous Integration
Change Management
Scrum With Kanban
Principles of Lean-Agile Leadership
ALM Tools
Kanban
Spotify
Agile Product Ownership
Code
Lean Agile Basics
System Integration Environments
Perfection Game
Slides
Certified SAFe
Agile Product Development
Continuous Planning
Keith Sawyer
Scaled Agile Framework
Agile Techniques
Nexus and Kanban
Lean and Agile Techniques
Story Slicing
TDD
Retrospectives
Artificial Intelligence
Lean Agile Leadership
Product Ownership
predictability
Agile Basics
Software Development Estimation
Nexus Integration Team
LPM
SAFe Release Planning
An Appreciative Retrospective
Professional Scrum Master
NIT
Agile Israel
Enterprise DevOps
Kanban Basics
chatgpt
SAFe DevOps
Accelerate Value Delivery At Scale
Agile Development
Legacy Code
Professional Scrum Product Owner
Jira Plans
Frameworks
Self-organization
EOS®
Manage Budget Creation
Scrum Master
Agile Risk Management
Pomodoro Technique
LAB
Agile in the Enterprise
Agile Games
Agile Release Management
Tools
BDD
Development Value Streams
ART Success
Jira
ScrumMaster Tales
Portfolio for Jira
GanttBan
Professional Scrum with Kanban
IT Operations
transformation
Lean Software Development
Lean Agile Management
Team Flow
speed @ scale
Risk Management on Agile Projects
Test Driven Development
Scrum Guide
Atlaassian
Kaizen
Continuous Improvement
Jira Cloud
Implementation of Lean and Agile
System Archetypes
Achieve Business Agility
Agile Testing Practices
Software Development
Kanban 101
Lean and Agile Principles and Practices
Tips
agileisrael
SAFe
Lean Startup
Lean Agile
Agile Contracts Best Practices
Webinar
Managing Projects
Value Streams
Systems Thinking
User stories
RSA
A Kanban System for Software Engineering
Product Management
AI
Release Train Engineer
Scrum.org
Lean Budgeting
Agile Mindset
Sprint Iteration
Rovo
Covid19
Agile and DevOps Journey
Acceptance Test-Driven Development
Agile Outsourcing
Games and Exercises
LeSS
Iterative Incremental Development
What Is Kanban
Agile Assembly Architecture
Agile for Embedded Systems
Agile Program
PI Planning
Amdocs
Business Agility
Daily Scrum
Coaching Agile Teams
ROI
ATDD vs. BDD
lean agile change management
Jira admin
Agile
RTE
Scrum Primer
Engineering Practices
ARTs
Atlassian
Agile Release Planning
Agility
Limiting Work in Progress
Agile Games and Exercises
Lean Agile Organization
Process Improvement
Agile Community
Continuous Deployment
Elastic Leadership
Presentation
Nexus and SAFe
speed at scale
SPC
Agile Marketing
Operational Value Stream
PI Objectives
Kanban Game
ATDD
Legacy Enterprise
Lean-Agile Budgeting
Scrum Values
Scrum
Scrum and XP
Entrepreneurial Operating System®
Certification
AgileSparks
Logo
Enable registration in settings - general

Contact Us

Request for additional information and prices

AgileSparks Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter, and stay updated on the latest Agile news and events

This website uses Cookies to provide a better experience
Shopping cart