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Personal Kanban

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Personal Kanban is a recognized productivity approach and one I'm experimenting with. I see great potential in Personal Kanban as a tool and technique but I was disappointed with the book, in spite of really wanting to like it. I felt too much time was spent extolling the virtues and benefits of the techniques and not nearly enough describing how to apply Personal Kanban to personal productivity.

As a long time GTD (Getting Things Done) adherent and practitioner, the point where the authors suggested Personal Kanban as an adjunct approach to GTD resonated more for me than a lot of the rest of the book. I don't see how to make Personal Kanban work with the numbers of tasks and projects I have to deal with in personal and work life. How to scale the system and work with it were discussed only briefly. These were probably the most important issues to me after the basic description of the two rules and the cards that make up the system.

Should you read this book? I don't want to discourage anyone since it is the seminal work on Personal Kanban. And my responses are only to the book as a reading experience. I have just begun to explore the system, so my response to the book might change on a future re-reading after I've actually used Personal Kanban as a system.

Others may find the approach less annoying than I did and it does introduce the system successfully. Less selling the benefits and more hands on discussion of the system and ways to use it would make this a much stronger book.

December 26, 2015Report this review