Operations review
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Since metrics drive behavior, an operations review:
- reminds everyone that we are running a business;
- presents a summary of the overall performance for the month;
- budget details;
- throughput;
- headcount;
- tells how well we are managing against budget, and, therefore, how much slack we have to do kaizen, buy items like flat-screen monitors and new computers or throw a party.
- builds on the financial data of the previous time period, so takes place after the books for the prior month are closed
- preferably takes place on a fixed day of the week, for example on the second Friday of the subsequent month;
- compares planned versus actual numbers;
- is the feedback loop between adjacent layers in the holarchy:
- the Check in the PDCA-cycle;
- the Measure in Sociocracy;
- sprint or release review meeting in scrum.
A mini operations review:
- is an objective, data-driven retrospective on the squad's or organization’s performance rather than the more subjective, anecdotal, qualitative management.
- is above and beyond any one sprint or project;
- sets an expectation;
- provides the feedback loop that enables growth of organizational maturity and organization- level continuous improvement.
- reviews data like:
- defect rates
- average lead time distribution
- throughput
- value-added efficiency, and, occasionally,
- a specific report that would drill into some aspect of our process on which the business needs more information
- wraps up with questions & answers, comments, and suggestions from the floor for a few minutes.
To keep our costs under control, guest sponsors food—Invite a vice president from another part of the company so that our value-stream partners take an interest, show interest in them and invite them to present.
Source:
- Kanban—Successful Evolutionary Change for Your Technology Business, David Anderson