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Color-coding tasks in a Kanban board can significantly enhance the visual management of your workflow. It allows for easy identification of tasks based on their status, priority, or type. For instance, you can use different colors for different stages of a task, such as 'to-do', 'in progress', and 'done'. This can help in quickly identifying bottlenecks or delays in the process. Moreover, color-coding can also be used to indicate the priority of tasks, helping team members to focus on high-priority tasks first.
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The Kanban system was developed by the industrial engineer Taiichi Ohno at Toyota in the 1950s. The term Kanban comes from two Japanese words, "Kan" 看 which means sign, and "Ban" 板, which means board, aka "signboard." The term was popularized in Japan around the 1600s when the economy took off, and Japanese towns were flooded with competing businesses that needed artful signboards to stand out and compete for customers. This tradition has continued to the neon, LED, and 3D billboards that populate Japanese cities today. The best of these signboards communicated their core value in as clear and concise a way as possible.
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Need a simple but effective workflow to manage projects? Use our Kanban Board Spreadsheet to visually track and organize a project's most important ta...
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