Lean Change Self-Starter Kit
This template is for people who want to get started with Lean Change Management.
This template is for people who want to get started with Lean Change Management. It includes:
Two LCM Change Canvases
Two Big Visible Change Program Visualizations
MVP - A Minimum Viable Process to get you started
Change Canvases: We include a Storytelling Canvas and a Strategic Change Canvas with short instructions for how to use each section
Big Visible Walls: This is built using Miro's table element so you can customize the rows and columns for your context and workflow.
MVP: This is the simplest possible change management process you can have, along with tips for how to make the most of LCM out of the box!
For help/questions, reach out at community@leanchange.org
Get started with this template right now.
Lean Coffee
Works best for:
Agile Methodology
Lean Coffee is a collaborative meeting format that encourages open dialogue and self-organization. Participants suggest discussion topics, vote on them, and engage in time-boxed conversations. This template provides a structured framework for facilitating Lean Coffee sessions, enabling teams to address issues, share knowledge, and make decisions collectively. By fostering inclusivity and autonomy, Lean Coffee empowers teams to drive meaningful discussions, build consensus, and drive continuous improvement.
Customer Touchpoint Map Template
Works best for:
Desk Research, Product Management, Mapping
To attract and keep loyal customers, you have to truly start to understand them—their pain point, wants, and needs. A customer touchpoint map helps you gain that understanding by visualizing the path your customers follow, from signing up for a service, to using your site, to buying your product. And because no two customers are exactly alike, a CJM lets you plot out multiple pathways through your product. Soon you’ll be able to anticipate those pathways and satisfy your customers at every step.
Rose, Bud, Thorn Template
Works best for:
Retros, Agile
The Rose, Bud, Thorn template is a structured method for team reflection and feedback, designed to help teams identify positive aspects, potential opportunities, and challenges within a project or situation. One key benefit of using this template is its ability to promote balanced feedback and productive discussions, which can lead to improved team processes and outcomes.
Lean Canvas Template
Works best for:
Agile Methodology, Strategic Planning, Agile Workflows
Business opportunities can get dense, cumbersome, and complex, and evaluating them can be a real challenge. Let a lean canvas streamline things and break down your business idea for you and your team. A great tool or entrepreneurs and emerging businesses, this one-page business model gives you an easy, high-level view of your idea — so you can stay focused on overall strategy, identify potential threats and opportunities, and brainstorm the various factors at play in determining your potential profitability in an industry.
Work Plan Template
Works best for:
Mapping, Project Planning
A work plan is essentially a roadmap for a project. It articulates the steps you must take to achieve the desired goal, sets demonstrable objectives, and establishes measurable deliverables. An effective work plan guides you throughout the project lifecycle, allowing you to realize an outcome by collaborating with your team. Although work plans vary, they generally contain four core components: goals, strategy, tactics, and deliverables.
Cost-Benefit Analysis Template
Works best for:
Leadership, Decision Making, Strategic Planning
With so many day-to-day decisions to make—and each one feeling high-stakes—it’s easy for all the choices to weigh a business or organization down. You need a systematic way to analyze the risks and rewards. A cost benefit analysis gives you the clarity you need to make smart decisions. This template will let you conduct a CBA to help your team assess the pros and cons of new projects or business proposals—and ultimately help your company preserve your precious time, money, and social capital.