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1411

answers:

8

After investigating a little bit scrum and kanban, I finally read this answer and decided to start using kanban, picking something from scrum (note that I'm working mostly by myself, and I do have read this question and its answers).

Now, my question is: which tool would be best to get started?

  1. whiteboard and postit
  2. agilezen.com
  3. JIRA with greenhopper
  4. a spreadsheet (possibly on Google Docs)
  5. brightgreenprojects.com
  6. Agilo
  7. Target Process
  8. something else (please specify)

Notes about each:

  1. I would lean towards the whiteboard, but there are several drawbacks (e.g. cannot make automatic charts, time measurements, metrics, and sometimes I work from home - where I need it most - and it's not convenient to carry :-)

  2. I don't want to remember another username/password (I promised to myself to signup only to OpenID-enabled services)

  3. My employer has JIRA but my group doesn't use it - I might ask for an account (it shouldn't require another password) and maybe later involve the rest of the group. But I don't know if they are using greenhopper and if it's a big deal installing it.

  4. I generally hate spreadsheets

  5. maybe overkill?

  6. I'd be happy to have a localhost instance, but it could be problematic to give access to the whole group (per network/firewalls) - not a deal-breaker but surely a concern

What I'd like to get from this?

  • being more productive
  • tracking how much time I spend in any given task, possibly discussing the issue with my supervisor
  • tracking what "blocks" me most often
  • immediately see where I am compared to my schedule
  • manage in a better way my long todo list (e.g. answering faster to the "what I should do next?" question)

Do you have any suggestion?

Note on the scrumish tag: read the Henrik Kniberg's PDF. He first introduced the definition of scrumish on page 9.

+2  A: 

pick the tool you already have, and start using it; don't let the absence of the "perfect tool" become an excuse not to start

EDIT: pick the simplest thing that can possibly work. In your case that would be whiteboard and postit notes. These have almost no setup overhead and will provide a constant visual reminder of what you're supposed to be doing.

And I suggest that you get used to making decisions on your own, as you're going to have to be your own Scrum Master ;-)

Steven A. Lowe
??? I didn't ask which tool would be perfect, but which one will be best to start with, considering that I'm a beginner in a single-person team. Even "the one I already have" is not one, but several, so which one?
Davide
@[Davide]: see edit. It sure looks like you're procrastinating to me ;-)
Steven A. Lowe
fair enough, but I'm still concerned about the "portability" issue - and I wouldn't get time measurements and other metrics
Davide
+4  A: 

agilezen.com seems like the ideal solution for you. I have used it in the past solo for myself and it is convenient. I would not let a prejudice against non-OpenID sites get in the way of making a good choice.

cfeduke
Do you mind elaborating a little bit? What good does it provide for a solo? I mean, how did you use it, compared to a whiteboard?
Davide
The advantage over a whiteboard for me was mobility. I have personal projects I sometimes touch up at lunch or while I am out. When I do work I like to see what progress I make, rather than have some whiteboard I have to update when I get home.
cfeduke
+3  A: 

If I may, I think that you are on the wrong path. Anything else than 1. or 4. is overkill and pretty much useless for a non distributed team. So for a team of one person...

Seriously, if you can avoid using a web based application, just do it. First, unless you are already mastering Scrum/Kaban, you need to learn the process, not a tool. Don't let a tool dictate the process. Then most web based tools are just too much click intensive, less easy and fast to update, less transparent/visible than a spreadsheet and a physical board. They are really 2nd category options.

So, I'd go for a spreadsheet and a physical board combo. If you need some charts (I'm still wondering what kind of chart/metrics you want to generate and what value they provide), a spreadsheet is the ideal tool (but honestly, you don't need any tool to draw a burndown). If you need to work from home, take the spreadsheet (or use google docs) and post its with you. Let's be objective, the impediments you mentioned are actually not real.

Last thing, if you had chosen the simplest thing that can possibly work, you would already be doing Scrum, Scrumban or whatever. So, instead of looking for a tool, my advice would be to just start doing it.

Pascal Thivent
Well, doing a combo means that I am duplicating the effort, the (although small) overhead, having to synch them, etc: no way.See the edit for what metric/chart I'd like to get.You said that spreadsheet is ideal. Well, I always fight with spreadsheet to have them doing what I mean... do you have any recommendation for a good template?
Davide
Combo doesn't mean duplicating anything. By combo, I mean: a spreadsheet for the Product Backlog and a physical board for the Spring Backlog. But because your target is not clear (Scrum, Kaban, Scrumban?), I can't provide a more accurate answer. For a template, I'd suggest Henrik Kniberg's Index Card Generator (http://blog.crisp.se/henrikkniberg/2007/12/18/1197973740000.html) or Petri Heiramo's advanced product and sprint backlog template if you want to put everything in a spreadsheet (http://agilesoftwaredevelopment.com/videos/advanced-excel-template-product-and-sprint-backlog-management)
Pascal Thivent
+1 - Or use the whiteboard and a digital camera combo and forget the spreadsheet.
Don Roby
+1  A: 

In the interests of diversity ;-) www.kanbantool.com has just launched too. It's open beta and seems at first glance even more "lightweight" than agilezen.

Mark Gibaud
A: 

Yeah, I'm also using http://kanbantool.com - easy to use and perfect for distributed team like mine.

David
+1  A: 

Target process is good too

Yassir
A: 

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henry
A: 

Bright Green have just launched a free version of their tool. It looks good .. the free version is fully functional too: https://signup.brightgreenprojects.com/plan/Free

Rowan