Advantages of electronic Kanban Boards
Using an online version of a Kanban tool has advantages over a physical board:
- accessible from anywhere: if any members of your team work remotely it’s great for everybody to be able to collaborate online. A physical Kanban board can’t be updated by the remote guys and they can’t see anyone else’s updates. Workaround with webcams are cumbersome and unreliable.
- working links to artifacts: if you’re using a bug tracking tool it’s nice to have links from Kanban cards to associated tickets in your tracking tool. If you use a physical board it’s tedious (and unrealistic) to keep those relations up to date.
- automatic calculation of important metrics: an electronic tool shows immediate metrics. For example, knowing the average cycle time of cards helps measure how fast you can deliver and how flexible you are in adapting your work to upcoming requirements.
Disadvantages of electronic Kanban boards
Of course, there are disadvantages, too.
- smaller: daily standups in front of a monitor has the majority of people squinting at those tiny images of cards. It’s hard to read card titles and hinders involvement (touch screens to the rescue?).
- hard to make visible all the time: the electronic board as a passive information radiator requires a PC with an attached monitor running all day. And then the dreaded “Login” screen, hunting down a keyboard and typing the username, password for the tenth time this week. Not only is this annoying, but the danger of “meh – I can’t be bothered with this right now” creeps into the team.
- easy to misuse as an idea dump: electronic tools are built to manage large amounts of data. Unfortunately, our brains aren’t. When we use such tools we tend to track each and every half-cocked idea that’s ever been mentioned instead of taking the hard decisions which ideas are actually worth pursuing. This creates a lot of waste in our product development flow.
- people stay rooted to their desk: when working in an office it’s so much easier to keep your seat and pull up a tool for a quick comment instead of walking over to your colleague to discuss the current status. This minimizes communication instead of maximizing it.
Right now, as our team is working from different locations, I’m ready to accept all the cons of an electronic Kanban board to leverage its biggest advantage: universal accessibility. We’re careful to avoid any pitfalls the electronic tools lure you into like tracking too much stuff. But the daily standups just aren’t working as we’d like. How are you managing your product development flow? Please let us know in the comments.