Kanban Principles and Practices
Kanban rests on a small set of guiding principles and core practices. These ideas explain why Kanban works as a method, beyond just the board itself.
The Foundational Principles
Kanban begins with four principles that guide how a team adopts the method.
Start With What You Do Now
Kanban does not ask a team to redesign its process from scratch. Teams apply Kanban directly on top of their current roles and workflow steps.
Agree to Pursue Incremental Change
Kanban favors small, steady improvements over large, sudden changes. A team adjusts one part of its process at a time and observes the result before making another change.
Respect Current Roles and Responsibilities
Kanban does not require new job titles or a reorganized team structure. People keep their existing responsibilities while adopting Kanban practices.
Encourage Leadership at Every Level
Kanban expects good ideas to come from anyone on the team, not only from managers. Any team member can suggest a process improvement.
Start as-is -> Improve in small steps -> Keep existing roles -> Welcome ideas from everyone
The Core Practices
Beyond the four principles, Kanban defines six core practices that teams apply day to day.
Visualize the Workflow
Teams map their real work steps onto a board so everyone can see the current state of every task.
Limit Work in Progress
Teams cap how many tasks can sit in each stage at once, a practice covered in detail in an earlier topic.
Manage Flow
Teams watch how smoothly tasks move across the board and adjust the process when tasks slow down or pile up.
Make Process Policies Explicit
Teams write down clear rules for each column, such as what "ready for review" actually means, so everyone follows the same standard.
Implement Feedback Loops
Teams hold regular check-ins, such as a daily stand-up or a weekly review, to discuss the board and catch problems early.
Improve Collaboratively, Evolve Experimentally
Teams treat every process change as a small experiment. They test an idea, measure the result, and keep or discard the change based on real evidence.
Layman's Example
Think about improving a home cleaning routine. You do not buy all new furniture or rearrange every room overnight. You start with your current home, move one shelf to a more convenient spot, and watch whether the change helps. Kanban improves a team's workflow with the same gentle, evidence-based approach.
Key Takeaway
Kanban combines four guiding principles with six core practices. Together, they help a team improve its existing process gradually instead of forcing a disruptive overhaul.
