Lance Knight, ConnectALL President and COO, joins us directly from the Agile 2022 conference. Lance discusses the concepts of value stream management and value creation. The video and a transcript of the conversation are below.
Mitch Ashley: I have the pleasure of being joined by Lance Knight. Lance is COO and president of ConnectALL. Lance, good to be talking to you.
Lance Knight: It’s great to talk to everybody here again. It’s great to meet you as well.
Ashley: Nice to meet you. I know you’ve had a lot of conversations with Allen and great opportunity for me to have a conversation with you, too. For folks that might not know you or have seen you before, tell us about yourself and of course ConnectALL. Tell us a little bit about that.
Knight: Well, you know, I hardly ever done that before, told anybody about myself. But anyway, I’m Lance Knight. I’m president and CEO of ConnectALL. And you know, we’ve been around ConnectALL for a while. We’ve been spearheading in maybe in the forefront of this value stream management market and we’re excited to be part of this fun ride that’s value stream management. It’s been an interesting ride for me for years. I’ve been in this space since even before it was value stream management for years now. Just excited to see it grow and excited to be a part of___.com and we recently got nominated. It’s part of the 12 for value stream management solutions. So appreciate that. Yeah.
As for myself, more about myself, you know, I’ve got a wife, a kid. I’ve got three kids. I’m just kidding now. But lots of cool things happening in our industry now.
Ashley: It’s fascinating I think one of the things that is fascinating about value stream management is it’s emerging but it’s been around for a long time. It’s not like it’s new. It’s in the manufacturing and you go back to the goal and all. You know, a lot of other things and Toyota. So it isn’t a new concept, but it is as we apply it to software. What do you think it’s now is the time for value stream management? I’m really curious. Obviously you made a big decision of you’re CEO of this company and that’s what you’re focused on. Why is now the time you’re going to be able to make this happen?
Knight: First, you know, you’re so right and I’ve said this quite a bit, is, you know, I started my career in manufacturing, dong value stream management work, understanding leans, systems thinking, all of those things to improve how manufacturing happened. And what I think is now as you take a look at what happened with Agile, what’s going on with DevOps, and the way that people are developing software, they’re thinking how do I make this even better. And I have a whole bunch of opinions why now. One of those is maybe a little controversial, is the goals, aims, and means, and the great vision of what an Agile transformation was supposed to do with my organization was never truly achieved.
Ashley: You mean it got overhyped and oversold?
Knight: Overhyped, oversold. It only really talked about how developers to work better. It never, you know what I mean?
Ashley: Oh, I totally know what you mean.
Knight: My organization has spent millions of dollars on these coaches and transformational people, and now you want me to do that with DevOps too and build a community and feel good about it, and sing Kum-Ba-Ya.
Ashley: [crosstalk] solve that for us, didn’t- Agile solved that for us too before that and you know, this succession.
Knight: Yeah, right.
Ashley: It’s an evolution, right.
Knight: And I see a little of that bleeding into value stream management, but I think why V.S.M right now, because it makes you look at your end to end flow. It makes you understand how you’re deciding what to do. Makes you look at how co goes through things. It’s a little more logical, not that those other ones aren’t. But it’s more specific. It’s got an age old set of things. And business people, the ones that make decisions on things can wrap their head around it. All right, so someone puts a request in here, it goes here. It goes through our agile processes. What do mean? I can finally get these reports to tell me how efficient my teams are? I think that’s what’s driving a lot of it. And ConnectALL we call it see, measure, automate. I can see my value stream now. I can measure and I can automate.
And I think that’s just one reason why it’s taking off. And I think there’s some other ones. You know, well, we do agile, DevOps, value stream, what are we doing and how does this relate? And at ConnectALL we say this all the time, so it’s really interesting. Value stream management is a human thing. It’s a human endeavor. We talked earlier it’s been around forever with manufacturing. We didn’t have machines and computers out there measuring our value stream. We went and did that. We improved the flow. We looked at how parts moved around the shop floor. We mapped it. And we had some tools to help us. And a value stream management platform that’s what they’re there to do, help humans be more effective with managing requests to code in production, connecting it and automating the processes within it.
Ashley: yeah, there’s this phrase I heard, I don’t know where from. You know, you want to work on the business not just in the business. In other words, you have to sort of, that’s about continuous improvement, whatever that might be. But you have to understand it first. You have to be able to measure first. Where do we go improve. Another thing I wanted to run by you is I think one of the reasons why value stream management gets a lot of attention is we’ve elevated the value, the strategy behind software and how much that is importance of that to businesses, how much they’re counting on our ability to deliver. But you know, gone are the one year, 90 day whatever projects where you know, we think we’re going to get this spec, but we never do and something else pops out. And now we’re doing lots of little smaller races. How does a business know if I put a quarter in here I’m going to get my quarter’s worth of what I thought I was going to get there and how we can manage that process to help achieve those results? Is that fair do you think?
Knight: That’s fair too. And I think that’s another reason why it’s taking off right now, right. You know, my controversial point, but then there’s this other point of I’m never- I’m an executive. I’m over an organization. I’ve never seen what I’ve had move quick enough, move through. What are the bottom numbers? It’s invisible to me. Right? I have an initiative and I know I need these capabilities. I need this software. I need all these things. And as I’m saying that I’m watching just this initiative that’s an artifact in some system, I don’t know if that’s moving forward. I don’t know if I’m blocked. It’s a black box to me.
And value stream management kind of opens some of that up as you kind of look at flow. And then also like you said earlier, how am I prioritizing that? I’ve got technical done. That’s really important to repair. But how do I prioritize that rather than somebody saying I need to fix this technical debt. Where you could look at it and say, not yet. This is more important than that. This new capability to make me competitive in the market is more important than if I fix that technical debt today. And those decisions aren’t able to be made at the right levels. And it’s also strategy execution where I can go and to sign my outcomes I want and my initiatives. And then have those get executed across all the organizations, because we have all this visibility and track it.
So that’s the see part. And also the measure part where you talk about measuring. I can say, all right, now I’ve improved our processes by 25%. So now I can move quicker. The only thing that I think value stream management we have to be careful of is I don’t- and I’m seeing some of the other analyst firms do this. It’s not DevOps value stream management. It’s value stream management. And DevOps things are a part of that value stream.
Ashley: We have a value stream whether you’re doing DevOps or not, right?
Knight: You know, at ConnectALL my head of products says there’s a value stream now. Every company has it. You may not be aware that that is a value stream, but it is.
Ashley: I think it’s just been more elevated to our consciousness, right, because of DevOps.
Knight: Or more aware of the flow of value through it. Right. So, it’s interesting as it takes off and goes next stages of it and so on. I just want to make sure it stays the highest level thing from an organization perspective and that’s your value stream, right. You have DevOps tools of course and those are part of your value stream also. I just did a speaking slot somewhere about value stream management is not a feature and I went into that whole thing about how value stream management isn’t a feature of a tool or another tool. It4 is what you do and the tools and the platforms how you be more efficient. So it’s a different take I think than a lot of organizations have on it as they try to figure out how to build the best value stream feature in their product.
So ConnectALL we have value stream management platform. It lets you see, measure and automate but if you’re not educated on systems thinking, lean principles, we can do some little stuff, but you would have to map it, use area waste principles, lean principles to think it through, right. I’ve got some mooda, if I used the word right. Maybe we’ll get some text about he said that wrong, which I probably did. Which anyway, that’s waste. And then you could go figure out how to fix that. Why am I having these things?
So yeah, I mean I think it’s going to take off pretty well in organizations need to do this now because software is no longer that thing that that guy in the corner called Lance programs so that you’re more efficient in some of the manufacturing stuff you’re doing.
Ashley: Reminds me of, well, Jim and I first worked together in security. Security we evolving from sort of the people nobody knew that did this thing behind the scenes and couldn’t talk to them because they didn’t know what it was about, to more everyday people, system administrators, network administrators. And so you had to really think about the barrier to entry, right. Do you have to be a lean expert to do value stream management? Or can you step your way into it so there’s the whole idea for barrier to entry for your products? And how do you make that lower to get people started? And I know you had I think an announcement recently for ConnectALL. Can you tell us about that?
Knight: Yeah. So first, so you don’t need to be a lean expert to do it. Just have to maybe read a little white paper on it. And understand just the basics of it and it’ll help you through. So what we have done if you’re referencing to the fact that, and one of the reasons why we wanted to do this is that ConnectAL is going to offer a free online value stream management visualizer, designer where you can log in, put all your tools on there, draw the boxes of flow, decide what kind of flow loops you want, and just lay out your whole value stream, that’s actually yes, that’s’ what we have. That’s our big announcement coming next week is the free online value stream design. And it’s a nice little drag and drop environment where I can just drag on my tools. It’s going to have all the different tools on there, and then I can draw lines between them. I can set up my swim lanes, my boxes. We can do all kinds of things in order for you to lay out your value stream. You can name the links. You can name it so it’s personalized. You can put notes in there. And then it’ll give you a PDF view of your value stream that you can export, you can go around and share that with your manage- here’s how our workflow works. And it comes from the years that I’ve been doing value stream management workshops on a big whiteboard, but we’re not getting together these days for these big whiteboard sessions. So you know, it’s got these different pallets and you can do all these things so that you can actually get a good vision to see your value stream and how things are flowing. And we’d be happy to help you lay that out if you wanted to get on with a session with one of our session architects to walk you through it. You can save them because maybe multi-session thing. Export them and share them with other people that can load it into the free value stream from their computer. And we’re really excited about it because I think it’ll really help people understand how they can use just this one part of value stream management.
So you know, at ConnectALL we’re all about helping the humans be more effective at this, right. And it’s just a great opportunity for anybody’s interested in getting involved in value stream management to have a place where they can go just lay it out. It’s pretty robust. There’s some cool things. Yesterday I was messing with it. I drew a turkey in it. So, you know, Thanksgiving’s coming. So, we drew this little turkey in there, right. Somebody will probably do a Christmas tree as well. But the cool thing is I know some people will probably be like well, I can do that with this tool and this tool. That’s true you can. However, this one’s also free and we’re going to have all of the images and icons of the tools and the flow icons and all of those things preloaded so you can just drag and drop on there. And you’re off to the races of being able to start to tell the story around how you can improve value stream within your ___.
Ashley: Looking at things systemically, even if you think you know the system, the process really well, at least my going through things like that, you just go, I don’t really know what happens here. I kind of do but I don’t really know. So you can learn that or figure that out or somebody who’s mapping this out. And then to your point is once you’ve got that, now you’ve increased your understanding of what we do or the flow of what we do, where do we work? Right, you’re going to go with the theory of constraints and let’s look for a bottleneck. Let’s look for you know, we need a future over a technical debt is where value is. And you start to connect it into a system of creating software, which is I imagine more of your- the paid version of ConnectALL.
Knight: Well, so paid version will operationalize your connections. We can actually, you’ll see the flow of work and we do the integrations, the connections, the triggering, the capturing. We offer all the tough stuff the V.S.M. platform can do at ConnectALL. And normally for these talks I don’t talk much about our great product which is really, really great. We got a brand new release, 2-11 coming out that has some great- I’m using platitudes by saying great, but it has some really great features coming out in the future.
Usually when I talk I want to help the industry. I want to help the space. And that helps me of course. But here this free tool will get you up and running. You can see, measure, you can do some measurement stuff in there. And actually you can put your measurements in there and actually tell a story to your boss. So I was on a conference recently and someday said, well, to do value stream management you need to you know, go talk to your boss and have him approve the project and build a little community and figure out how you’re going to adopt value stream management principles and do all this stuff. And I started to feel like here we go again with community and adoption and the feel good part of it.
And all of that is really relevant when you think about agile, when you think about DevOps, that is relevant. DevOps is a culture shift. And a culture shift, I’ve spoken on this before, is transforming operations and DevOps to work so well together and when operations is normally commanding control, right, can’t have access to those servers because this reason. I used to be that guy, so I can speak to it with great understanding. And having people change that mindset and culture so they can collaborate better, this is not. This is value stream management. You map the value stream. You look for waste. You point it out. You try to figure out how to remove it. And you work with people to do it, don’t get me wrong. But there’s no sprints. There’s no ceremonies. Once you’ve done it, you look at it, figure out how to improve it. You improve it. You modify your map. And by the way you can save these and come back. And then you look for the next place to improve flow. I’m for the other stuff. I’m just saying this is not. This is value stream management. It’s lean thinking. It’s been around forever. Doesn’t require all this other stuff, go do it.
Ashley: I think from an end user perspective I would think that now having a way of dipping my toe in the water, maybe more than that to really understand what’s going on. And I can decide. Now I can decide to go to the next place, whatever that looks like with ConnectALL.
Knight: Yeah. I go map it out and then I can talk about it.
Ashley: Not making a big bet that this thing is going to do stuff for us, but I just don’t know. Right. You know, you’re going to get value unintended.
Knight: So we’re really excited about it.
Ashley: Well, congratulations. When this airs actually I think it’ll be when this is released. So, how do folks get ahold of this? Is this ConnectAll.com?
Knight: Right, ConnectAll.com you’ll see a link there in the home page to go to designer and it’ll come up. We’re not looking for tons of lead information. We don’t want to know how many people run your company and you know, got control over that. I mean all we want is maybe an email and you’re off to the races and you can save them and do all the stuff. And just use it to take that first step. And we have some partners who are using it to run consulting sessions and different things like that. So, I think it’s something that nobody’s done yet. I think it’ll really help move value stream management forward.
Ashley: Great. Well, congratulations on the launch of this entry point, the value stream designer. And definitely I’m going to check it out. So, appreciate-
Knight: I’d be happy to walk you through it. I’ll send you a quick copy of the turkey we made.
Ashley: I would love to see the turkey. All right, Lance. Lance Knight, CEO and president with ConnectALL. Thanks for joining us today, Lance.
Knight: Thank you.
Ashley: Take care.
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