Notes
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Work in process is how many things a team works on simultaneously.
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Some calls it "work in progress" instead of "work in Process" since the term "process" has a negative connotation in many organizations. The problem in many companies is that they have a lot of work in process that doesn't make any progress. Therefore, "Work in Process" better describes the reality within many organizations.
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A high number of working in the process leads to a high queue capacity utilization, which causes problems such as a higher cycle time and slows down the team's response to changes—the opposite of agile.
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Less WIP means shorter cycle times and a better flow efficiency.
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Too much work in the system diminishes predictability, and adherence to delivery schedules isn't present.
 
Backlinks
- The Principles of Product Development Flow
 - Control WIP by Shedding Requirements
 - Demand-Focused Approaches to Control WIP
 - Effects of Set a Limit on WIP (Work in Process)
 - Enhance the Effectiveness of WIP Constraints by Cross-Training Workers
 - Fixed WIP Couples the Batch Sizes of Adjacent Processes
 - Flow Efficiency
 - High-States/Congested Queues
 - Kanban Pull Principle
 - Kanban Uses WIP Constraints to Control the Cycle Time
 - Kanban
 - Queues in Product Development
 - The Economics of Holding WIP Changes when Queue Size Changes
 - The Kanban System Doesn't Make Assumptions About the Location of Bottlenecks
 - The Local Constraints of the Kanban System Have an Impressive Feedback Speed
 - Theory of Constraints (TOC)
 - Zombie Projects