Cumulative Flow Diagram definition
- Like Burn-Up Charts, cumulative flow diagrams are information radiators that can track progress for agile projects.
- A diagram used by Kanban is the Cumulative Flow Diagram (CFD), which describes the overall flow through the Kanban system; it provides a measurement for every significant step in the workflow.
- Tracked items can be features, stories, tasks, or use cases.
- They help us to gain inside in to projects issues, bottlenecks & cycle times
Cumulative Flow Diagram purpose
- By tracking total scope, Cumulative Flow Diagrams (CFDs) communicate absolute progress and give a proportional sense of project progress (e.g., On Day 14: 15% of features have been completed; 15% have been started; and, 70% have not been started). [Lean-Agile Software Development: Achieving Enterprise Agility. Alan Shalloway, Guy Beaver, James R. Trott.]
Cumulative Flow Diagrams vs Burn-Up Charts
- Cumulative Flow Diagrams (CFDs) differ from traditional Burn-Up Charts because they convey total scope (not started, started, completed) of the entire backlog.
Agile Progress : Burn-Up Chart vs Burn-Down Chart
Agile Progress : Burn-Up Chart
Agile Progress : Burn-Down Chart
Agile Progress, Tasks board and Kanban Board
Scrum for Developers : Scrum PSD flashcards
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