Floor Tape Store

Monday, May 2, 2011

Lean Roundup #23 – April, 2011

A selection of highlighted blog posts from Lean bloggers from the month of April, 2011.  You can also view the previous monthly Lean Roundups here.

Can you Avoid Lean Failure? – Chris Paulsen answers a readers question by explaining common characteristics of successful Lean thinking companies.

Embrace the Opportunity of Failure – Kevin Meyer shares a personal example to illustrate the importance of learning from failure not fearing failure.

Engage in Improving the Management System – John Hunter says it takes active participation and in-process indicators to improvement management system.

Big Change or Step by Step? – Dragan Bosnjak answers a common question about the rate of change by looking at pros and cons.

The Lean Tortoise and the Hares – Kevin Meyer explains why slow and steady wins the race especially for those long journeys like Lean transformation.

Barn Raising Kaizen – Michael Lombard explains this concept of kaizen as the way it should an environment of team work.

Do Executives "Get It" – Glenn Whitfeld says that when you introduce something new you need to do more than "talk the talk", you must "walk the talk."

Effectively Leading and Mentoring Others - Steve Antonelli shares a story of coaching from the Gemba where he learned the importance of patience, consistency, and praise.

Put Out the Fire or Prevent the Fire – David Kasprzak reminds us that sometimes the only to get away from all the fires you're fighting is to let some of them burn.

Do What You Know – Pete Abilla shares a person story about some sage advice: Do what you know, start small, and figure out the rest as you go.

Who is the Customer for Your Internal Quality Audits? – Jamie Flinchbaugh says quality should have a bad cop mentality but instead reflect the voice of the customer.

Human Resources Role in Lean – Matt Wrye talks about the importance of having HR involved in a Lean transformation.

Lean is never sustainable, but one person can become better and better at it – Michael Balle says sustaining Lean itself adds no value but  everyone practicing Lean thinking does.

Why Lean Fails: Operation Excellence Treated as a Tool Based on Vocation, Not a Principle Based on Profession – Steven Spear says true sustained excellence comes about from having systematic approaches.

Lean Saves Capital – Daniel Jones talks about how Lean improvement can avoid unnecessary capital expenditures.

Time: The Ultimate Currency – David Kasprzak explains that time is our most precious element and I couldn't agree more.
6 Principles for Rebuilding Industry – Jon Miller shares some principles for those rebuilding Japan after the natural disaster that everyone can benefit from.

Who is Responsible for Quality? – Jamie Flinchbaugh explains why everyone in the organization needs to be responsible for quality from the standpoint of impact.

Staying Power - Zane Ferry says we need to improve of application of new knowledge if we want to produce lasting, sustainable changes in behavior.

An Overlooked Benefit of Kaizen Events – Jeff Hajek advocates the use of Kaizen events as a way to develop skills and identify the character traits that provide the foundation for strong leadership.

It's Harder to Tolerate Waste "When you know what good looks like..." – Mark Graban shares a personal story from healthcare on waste that I think we can all relate to in terms of seeing waste in all processes.

Tools, Rules, Principles, and Lean Wallpaper – Art Smalley talks about misguided lean efforts today that lack strong technical knowledge to support a strong Lean thinking foundation.

The "D" Word – Erika Fox explains what discipline might look like in a Lean organization.

Practice Makes Permanent – Bruce Hamilton explains that practice does not really make it perfect but it does make it permanent.   


Stay connect to A Lean Journey on our Facebook page or LinkedIn group.
Follow me on Twitter or connect with me on Linkedin
You can also subscribe to this feed or email to stay updated on all posts.

1 comment: