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Monday, August 25, 2025

Lean Tips Edition #320 (#3826 - #3840)

For my Facebook fans you already know about this great feature. But for those of you that are not connected to A Lean Journey on Facebook or Twitter I post daily a feature I call Lean Tips.  It is meant to be advice, things I learned from experience, and some knowledge tidbits about Lean to help you along your journey.  Another great reason to like A Lean Journey on Facebook.


Here is the next addition of tips from the Facebook page:


Lean Tip #3826 – Watch for Signs of Burnout in Others.

Work burnout is a real problem today, and it comes at greater risk during times of intense stress and pressure. Many people are stressed, putting in more work hours than ever before and finding it difficult to separate work and home life.

Managers who are skilled at empathetic leadership are able to recognize signs of overwork in others before burnout becomes an issue that results in disengagement or turnover. This might mean taking a few extra minutes each week to check in with team members and gauge how they’re handling their current workload and helping them to recover from overwork.

Lean Tip #3827 – Listen With Genuine Curiosity

It certainly is possible to increase empathy. As I usually say, that’s one “muscle” that is better developed in some people and less in others. But we can all cultivate and improve it. One concrete step is to commit to really understanding others, by listening to them with openness and genuine curiosity. Let go of your assumptions and judgments and really try to understand the reality of the other person.

Lean Tip #3828 – Be Mindful Of Each Individual’s Full Experience

Focus on understanding each person’s individual experiences, challenges and needs, rather than task-based updates. By actively listening, without judgment, and reflecting back what they hear, leaders can better appreciate different perspectives, enabling more considerate decisions that strengthen engagement and productivity across the organization through improved emotional intelligence.

Lean Tip #3829 – Accept People As They Are

Real, profound, relationship-changing empathy starts with the acceptance that you’ll never fully understand others—and that understanding has nothing to do with acceptance. Humans are complex, affected by context, beliefs, background and culture. The best form of empathy is to not make assumptions; be supportive, ask questions and accept how people are. Recognize that each individual has a unique experience.

Lean Tip #3830 – Balance Empathy With Accountability

While empathy is essential, leaders must also maintain accountability. Empathy does not mean avoiding difficult conversations or shying away from tough decisions to avoid hurting someone's feelings. It means understanding and respecting their emotions, even during difficult conversations. Leaders should balance empathy and hold their team members responsible for their performance and actions.

Lean Tip #3831 – Emphasize Goal-Setting and Growth

To build trust with your team, your employees need to know that you're invested in their growth and success.

Fostering a true people-first culture in your workplace means understanding the individual goals of your team members and proactively helping them achieve those goals.

You chose your team because they are the best people for their jobs. Don't stunt their potential by leaving them stagnant. Instead, show that you're just as interested in helping them reach their goals as they are.

You can show investment in your team members by prioritizing goal-setting and providing learning opportunities. Encourage them to set at least one long-term goal, and make yourself available to discuss their goals with them, especially if they're unsure about what goals to set.

To support them in achieving this goal, you can provide resources like leadership training opportunities or time to meet with another manager at the company to ask questions about the role.

Lean Tip #3832 – Develop a Feedback-Based Culture

Good communication is pivotal when developing a trust-based culture in your workplace, and it goes both ways.

Not only is it important to establish a feedback system that allows leaders to communicate with employees, but there also needs to be a well-established process for employees to give feedback to leaders.

Implementing a defined system means setting clear expectations for when and how communication occurs regarding performance feedback. This means employees won't feel blindsided by receiving unexpected or unsolicited feedback from leaders, and vice versa.

Further, when systems exist for employees to offer feedback to management, it can make them feel empowered and like their voice matters within the organization. This continual feedback loop is great for creating meaningful bonds and building the emotional trust. 

Lean Tip #3833 – Give Back With Recognition and Rewards

We all like to be recognized for our strengths and the value we bring to our teams. Recognizing positive workplace behaviors rewards employees who go above and beyond, while encouraging others to follow their example.

Implementing a praise or rewards system in your organization can be a great way to give back to your employees. You might issue public praise for employees who exceed their goals and use a reward system to incentivize your team to achieve.

Make sure the criteria to qualify for these rewards are well-defined and all members of your team can benefit. Giving all employees in your organization equal opportunities to earn rewards for doing exceptional work is important for maintaining fairness.

Lean Tip #3834 – Empower Through Choices

To the extent possible, give your employees autonomy to make meaningful choices throughout the day. Micromanagement can make employees feel like you don't trust them to make decisions on their own.

Over time, it can wear employees down, damage workplace relationships, and even promote a toxic work culture that ultimately hurts everyone. Remember, trust goes both ways. You need to give it to earn it.

When you trust your employees to make decisions for themselves, you show trust and empower them to take initiative.

Trusting the decision-making capabilities of your team encourages them to make independent decisions that represent the best interests of themselves and the company.

To encourage autonomy, establish clear boundaries and expectations for your team. Ensure that all team members understand their roles and responsibilities and have well-defined production goals.

They’ll find creative solutions to problems, improve workflows, and develop new approaches to tasks that benefit the whole team.

Lean Tip #3835 – Demonstrate Gratitude

A little gratitude can go a long way. Find ways to show appreciation for your team members regularly. Simple gestures like thanking your employees for the work they do can build a more positive work environment.

Appreciation can have widespread effects on team member attitudes, feelings of emotional security, and trust in their supervisors.

For example, you can write individualized thank-you cards for members you supervise, distribute small rewards like snacks and gift cards, or simply send a brief message of appreciation to each member of your team.

The key is to be genuine and consistent. Don't save your praise for special occasions. Make sure your team knows you recognize and value the work they do every day.

Lean Tip #3836 – Build a Culture of Experimentation and Innovation

Create an open and inclusive workplace where employees feel safe to take risks and share their ideas. This doesn’t have to be a free for all; clear guidelines preserve accountability and help team members understand where they can take risks most effectively.

Trust is a prerequisite for a culture of experimentation. You want the workforce to feel safe raising ideas that could help the business while giving and receiving constructive feedback alongside their colleagues.

Not every idea will be explored further, and that’s OK. Give employees the opportunity to refine their ideas and test them safely during the flow of work. Use these experiments as a chance to learn and improve. Giving this type of autonomy builds engagement and encourages innovation while reinforcing accountability.

Lean Tip #3837 – Prioritize Performance Outcomes

When you manage based on work outcomes, leaders can save time and encourage autonomy. This starts by training managers to help employees set effective goals that drive their performance and align with the business strategy.

Once goals are set, employees need the right necessary resources and tools to complete their tasks and make progress. Train managers to provide regular feedback that helps employees measure progress and make adjustments, rather than nitpicking or micromanaging them.

When granting employees autonomy to work how they work best, promote transparency through regular check-ins with managers. These conversations empower managers to understand how their employees are doing, intervene when necessary, and remove roadblocks.

Lean Tip #3838 – Empower Decision-Making Authority

One way to create collaboration and bottom-up innovation in your teams is by empowering employees with decision-making authority. Because they aren’t looking to leaders for all the answers, employees can think critically, suggest possible solutions to workplace problems, and experiment with them.

Extend this to daily tasks by letting employees exercise their judgment whenever possible. You can still have rules, processes, and templates for how work is best performed. But within those structures, encourage employees to identify situations where a deviation from ‌standard practice could be more effective.

Lean Tip #3839 – Allow Employees to Manage their Own Workloads

Empower employees to organize and prioritize their tasks, as they meet goals, deadlines, and productivity levels. This autonomy can include the timing and order of tasks, when to break down large tasks into components, and how to allocate their time and resources.

When managers give their reports freedom to manage their workload, they encourage smart planning, time management, and ownership. As employees find a structure and cadence that works for them, they ‌become more engaged and productive. This approach might even prevent employee burnout because workers are in charge of how and when they work. This furthers the cycle of job satisfaction, pride, and employer loyalty. 

Lean Tip #3840 – Reward Autonomous Work and Behaviors

Recognizing and rewarding successful autonomous work and behaviors can provide a sense of accomplishment for ‌employees, as well as serve as an incentive for others. Rewards can include bonuses and public and private recognition, depending on the context and the employee’s preferences.

Employees will repeat behaviors that they believe are valued by the organization. When HR leaders recognize hard work, they also cultivate a culture that encourages autonomy within the workplace.

 

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Friday, August 22, 2025

Lean Quote: 10 Ways to Have A Better Conversation

On Fridays I will post a Lean related Quote. Throughout our lifetimes many people touch our lives and leave us with words of wisdom. These can both be a source of new learning and also a point to pause and reflect upon lessons we have learned. Within Lean active learning is an important aspect on this journey because without learning we can not improve.


"It only takes one good conversation to change your understanding of someone else’s world, your world, and the world at large.  —  Celeste Headlee

Recently I ran across this Ted Talk entitled 10 Ways to Have a Better Conversation and I think it’s spot on. In a brief 10 minutes, Celeste Headlee (a person that makes her living by talking to people as a professional interviewer) shares great insight on how to have better conversations. I just love her perspective and she promises if you master even one of these 10 things you will enjoy better conversations.

CELESTE HEADLEE'S "10 WAYS TO HAVE A BETTER CONVERSATION"

1. Don't Multitask: Be fully present in the conversation, not half in, half out.

2. Don't Pontificate: Enter every conversation assuming you have something to learn.

3. Use Open-Ended Questions: Start questions with who, what, when, where, why, or how to get more elaborate

answers.

4. Go with the Flow: Let thoughts come and go without losing focus on the conversation.

5. If You Don't Know, Say So: Don't pretend to know something you don't; it's okay to admit ignorance.

6. Don't Equate Your Experience with Theirs: Every experience is unique; don't overshadow theirs with your own.

7. Try Not to Repeat Yourself: Reiterating the same points can be boring and condescending.

8. Stay Out of the Weeds: People care more about you than the minute details of your stories.

9. Listen: Truly listen to understand, not just to reply. It's a crucial skill in meaningful conversations.

10. Be Brief: Keep it concise and show genuine interest in others, which can lead to amazing discoveries.

You can watch Celeste Headlee’s full TED Talk here:

Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Moving from Blame to Accountability


To move from a culture of blame to one of accountability, it's crucial to understand the difference between the two. Blame focuses on finding fault and assigning responsibility for a negative outcome, often leading to defensiveness and conflict. Accountability, on the other hand, involves taking ownership of one's actions and contributing to solutions. By shifting the focus from blame to accountability, individuals and organizations can foster a more positive, productive, and growth-oriented environment.

Here are seven practices to lay the foundation for creating a culture of accountability.

  1. Delegate effectively. This includes taking the time to clearly articulate the desired results in writing, specify the delegate’s decision-making authority, provide required resources, and provide regular feedback. Most, if not all, problems would be mitigated if leaders followed this pattern of delegation.
  2. View problems as learning opportunities. The Kaizen Institute has a saying “Where no problem is perceived, there can be no improvement.” Never forget that we are all still learning to do our jobs better, and we learn best from our mistakes. Most importantly, make sure the people you lead know that you hold this belief.
  3. Lead with inquiry. Don’t assume you have all the facts. When you ask questions with a sincere desire to learn, you are less likely to provoke a defensive reaction.
  4. Remove emotion. Feedback and guidance turns to blame the instant the person on the receiving end perceives angry and frustrated tones. Even if the anger isn’t directed at the person accountable for the results, they will likely interpret the emotion as blame. Additionally, emotion interferes with the brain’s ability to problem solve and think logically.
  5. Focus on the problem and solution, not the person. Focusing on the issue or problem, not on the person, creates an open, trusting, communication-rich environment.
  6. Look for breakdowns in the process. Flawed systems, or processes, contribute to most workplace problems. We tend to assume that the cause of problems happened right before and in the same vicinity where the problem occurred. Think beyond the obvious to discover contributing factors separated from the problem by time and proximity. Poor leaders ask “Who’s at fault?” Strong leaders ask “Where did the process break down?
  7. Act like a leader. When things go right, good leaders deflect the credit. When things go wrong, good leaders take all the responsibility. That’s tough, but that’s the price of admission to leadership (or rather, it should be). It’s just a shame that most people in leadership positions didn’t get that memo.

Ending a cycle of blame and fostering accountability requires a conscious effort to shift your mindset and actions. By understanding the difference between blame and accountability, adopting a growth-oriented mindset, and actively promoting accountability, individuals and organizations can create a more positive and productive environment where learning and improvement are prioritized.


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Monday, August 18, 2025

Book Review: PROACTIVE Problem Solving by Doug Hall


Doug Hall’s
PROACTIVE Problem Solving is an energetic, insightful, and highly practical guide to transforming the way individuals and organizations address challenges. Drawing from decades of experience, including leading the innovative Brain Brew Bourbon Distillery, Hall shows how to shift from a reactive mindset to one where everyone—leaders, managers, and employees alike—actively identifies and fixes flawed work systems. Along the way, readers are introduced to clear frameworks, creative thinking tools, and inspiring case studies that demonstrate how these methods lead to meaningful and lasting improvements.

The book is divided into three main parts:

  1. Defining Problems and Solutions – Understanding the “what” and “why” behind challenges to focus energy where it counts.
  2. Creating Solutions – Proven tools, creative thinking techniques, and systems to spark better ideas faster.
  3. Driving Out Risk – Methods for testing, refining, and implementing solutions with confidence.

Hall’s style is both conversational and deeply actionable, blending stories from his work with Fortune 500 companies, small teams, and entrepreneurial ventures. Concepts like “STOP THE STUPID” (eliminating broken systems, not blaming people) and “Meaningfully Unique” (ensuring solutions are impactful and different) are memorable and easy to apply. Real-world examples and case studies—ranging from manufacturing floor improvements to creative approaches in education—bring the lessons to life.

At just over 200 pages, the book is concise enough to be read in a few focused sittings, yet rich with actionable content that rewards re-reading. Most readers could comfortably finish it in a weekend, but its depth and the included exercises make it equally valuable as a resource to revisit over months of application.

This book will be especially valuable for business leaders, managers, team members, educators, and entrepreneurs who want to cultivate a culture of continuous improvement. It’s also ideal for anyone seeking to boost problem-solving confidence, foster innovation, and increase engagement in their organization. Hall’s emphasis on empowering people at all levels makes it relevant across industries—from manufacturing to education, nonprofits to startups.

Whether you’re running a global organization or simply trying to make your daily work more effective and rewarding, PROACTIVE Problem Solving delivers both inspiration and an actionable toolkit. Hall’s approach proves that solving problems isn’t just about fixing what’s broken—it’s about creating a culture where innovation, engagement, and joy in work thrive. I strongly recommend reading it, whether you want to improve your personal problem-solving skills or ignite a transformation in your organization.

Get your copy here:









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Friday, August 15, 2025

Lean Quote: Empathy Begins with Understanding Life

On Fridays I will post a Lean related Quote. Throughout our lifetimes many people touch our lives and leave us with words of wisdom. These can both be a source of new learning and also a point to pause and reflect upon lessons we have learned. Within Lean active learning is an important aspect on this journey because without learning we can not improve.


"Empathy begins with understanding life from another person's perspective. Nobody has an objective experience of reality. It's all through our own individual prisms.  —  Sterling K. Brown

Being able to show empathy is a key and important skill. Empathy, the ability to understand and share the feelings of others, is a crucial skill that enhances communication, builds stronger relationships, and fosters a sense of connection. It allows individuals to see situations from different perspectives, understand the needs of others, and respond with compassion.

Some leaders naturally show more empathy at work than others and will have an advantage over their peers who have difficulty expressing empathy. Most leaders fall in the middle and are sometimes or somewhat empathetic.

Fortunately, it’s not a fixed trait. Empathetic leadership can be learned. If given enough time and support, leaders can develop and enhance their empathy skills through coaching, training, or developmental opportunities and initiatives.

Here are 28 tips to help:

  • Listen and don’t interrupt
  • Focus 100% on the other person
  • Be FULLY present (don’t have your phone nearby)
  • Use people’s names
  • Be nice and care
  • Do not take it in turns to talk
  • Put yourself in their shoes
  • Don’t judge
  • Acknowledge the person’s feelings
  • Ask questions
  • Don’t assume
  • Ensure your body language is spot on
  • Don’t finish off sentences
  • Summarise your understanding
  • Allow the person to rant
  • Get to know others personally
  • Make it about them and not you
  • Smile
  • Park your beliefs
  • Say “Thank you”
  • Accept feedback
  • Accept disagreement
  • Don’t give advice too soon
  • Use “we” not “me”
  • Look at it from different angles
  • Don’t have all the answers
  • Be open
  • Ask how you can help

When managers hone their empathetic leadership skills, they improve their effectiveness and increase their chances of success in the job. Empathetic leaders are assets to organizations, in part because they are able to effectively build and maintain relationships and retain talent — a critical part of leading organizations anywhere in the world.

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Book Review: Lean Made Simple

I just finished reading Lean Made Simple by Ryan Tierney which is an excellent guide for anyone looking to implement Lean principles in a practical and straightforward way. Ryan breaks down the concepts into actionable steps that are easy to understand and apply, even for those just starting their Lean journey.

Ryan Tierney leads operations at small, family run business making medical chairs with his brothers in Northern Ireland. After some business struggles and looking for answers Ryan came across Paul Aker’s videos about 2 Second Lean which turned his intrigue in Lean to a fascination.

Ryan documents the steps he took to create a vibrant, world-class Lean culture that has attracted the attention of industry leaders from around the world including Toyota, Lexus, Coca Cola, Caterpillar and even Royalty!

By doing the basics consistently and committing to these 12 steps you will be able to positively impact the people you serve, your organization and your community.

Step 1 – It starts with the leaders

Step 2 – Hold a morning meeting

Step 3 -Create a Lean leaders group

Step 4 – Create an example area

Step 5 – Teach your people to see waste

Step 6 – Introduce improvement time

Step 7 – Introduce yokoten

Step 8 – Make improving easy

Step 9 – Solve your inventory problems

Step 10 – Create standard operating procedures

Step 11 – Implement total ownership

Step 12 – Connect with other Lean enthusiasts

 Each chapter has Ryan’s recommendations, answers to burning questions, and prompts to make you think about your own organization to get you started creating your Lean culture. Ryan also shares a number of resources with QR codes to further your learning like podcasts, YouTube videos, and other literature at LeanMadeSimple.com/bookresources.

A very easy to read book at only 152 pages, this is a quick read in about 90 minutes. Ryan packs this book full of simple but very practical and highly effective tips to start the transformation of any company towards a more engaging, more efficient, more fulfilling place to work. 

This is a must-read for anyone wanting to transform their organizational culture.

Get your copy here.










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