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Friday, October 3, 2025

Lean Quote: Present Circumstances Merely Determine Where to Start

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.


"Your present circumstances don't determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start.  —  Nido Qubein

In both our personal and professional journeys, we will inevitably face setbacks that threaten to impede our progress. Qubein’s insight invites us to recognize these challenges not as barriers, but as the starting line of a new path forward powered by resilience and growth.

By embracing this philosophy, we can transform difficulties into opportunities to learn, evolve and ultimately ascend to new heights. Let’s explore key takeaways from Qubein’s wisdom and how shifting perspective allows us to harness adversity on the road to achievement.

Try the following five strategies to not only overcome adversity but actually go on to thrive.

Acknowledge the circumstances: The way to get out the other end of challenges with more ease and our self-esteem intact is to acknowledge and take ownership of the reality of the situation we find ourselves in. Doing enables us to confront adversity head-on and go on to work through effective solutions that might or might not entail asking for help.

Shift our perspective: Adopting a positive mindset will make a world of difference to the way we come through tough times. Taking the perspective of tackling adversity head-on can be a catalyst for personal development. In this way setbacks carry within them an opportunity to shore up future success.

Manage our emotions: Emotions like frustration, anger, fear, and sadness are likely to rear their heads when we’re faced with adversity. It’s important to note that managing our emotions has nothing to do with denial. What it’s about is acknowledging them while not allowing them to consume us. This is important because being in an emotionally balanced state enables us to make rational decisions to get out of the difficult circumstances we find ourself in.

Develop a Resilient Mindset: Resilience is like a muscle in the sense that the more we exercise our ability to bounce back from adversity, the more resilient we will become. Seeing setbacks and failures as steppingstones to success, rather than being a blight on our reputation clears the way for us to approach challenges as opportunities to learn, adapt, and become stronger in the process of getting on with our life no matter what challenges come up from time to time.

Focus on Solutions and Take Action: Spending a lot more time seeking solutions than dwelling on problems is the way to get ahead in life. It’s about analyzing the situation, identifying potential options, and developing an action plan. Taking this approach empowers us to regain control of our life. It will also reinforce our ability to overcome adversity moving forward.

The key is to reflect on all of the experiences life throws up, and take the time to identify the insights and wisdom that comes out of the challenging experiences in particular. Then consider how we might apply what we’ve learnt in future to avoid similar problems or to navigate them more effectively.


Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Lean Tips Edition #322 (#3856 - #3870)

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 #3856 – Change Starts with “Why’ to Build Alignment

Every meaningful improvement effort starts with clarity of purpose. Too often, organizations rush into changes without explaining the deeper reason behind them. This leads to confusion, resistance, and a lack of ownership. When people understand the “why,” they see how their work connects to the bigger picture.

Leaders should consistently tie improvements back to customer needs, organizational goals, and team benefits. For example, instead of saying “we’re changing this process to reduce cost,” frame it as “we’re simplifying this process so we can serve our customers faster and reduce frustration for you.” Purpose creates motivation, and motivation fuels sustainable improvement.

Lean Tip #3857 – Go See the Work: The Power of Gemba Walks

The Japanese word Gemba means “the real place”—where value is created. In Lean, leaders are expected to leave their offices and observe work directly at the Gemba. This builds understanding that no report, chart, or dashboard can fully provide.

A Gemba walk is not about fault-finding but about curiosity. Ask frontline employees what challenges they face, what ideas they have, and what’s getting in their way. Listen more than you talk. Over time, these visits create trust, uncover improvement opportunities, and show employees that leadership values their perspective.

Lean Tip #3858 – Focus on Waste, Not People

One of the greatest misconceptions about Lean is that it’s about cutting jobs. In reality, Lean is about cutting waste—activities that consume resources but add no value. Examples include excess motion, waiting, rework, or overproduction. When waste is removed, employees gain more time to focus on value-added work.

By making this distinction clear, leaders build psychological safety. Employees won’t fear improvements if they know their role is secure. Instead, they will actively help identify waste because they see it as a way to make their work easier and the customer experience better.

Lean Tip #3859 – Use Standard Work as a Foundation for Improvement

Standard work is often misunderstood as rigid and restrictive. In Lean, it is the opposite: it provides a stable baseline that allows innovation. When processes are consistent, abnormalities become visible. Teams can then improve with confidence because they know where the starting point is.

For example, if five employees perform the same task five different ways, it’s impossible to know what works best. But with a documented standard, the team can identify variation, test improvements, and refine the standard. This cycle of consistency and improvement accelerates learning and ensures that progress sticks.

Lean Tip #3860 – Small Improvements Add Up to Big Wins

Change doesn’t always need to be a large, disruptive project. Lean teaches that small, incremental improvements—often called kaizen—are more powerful because they are easier to implement, less disruptive, and build momentum.

Encourage employees to solve problems in their daily work. A simple fix, like rearranging tools for easier access, can save minutes each shift—adding up to hours over time. Multiply that across hundreds of employees and you create significant gains. Culture change happens when improvement becomes everyone’s everyday responsibility, not just management’s.

Lean Tip #3861 – Visualize the Work to Drive Clarity

Work that is invisible is difficult to manage. Visual management makes processes, performance, and problems visible so they can be addressed quickly. Simple tools like whiteboards, process maps, and status lights create shared understanding.

For example, a team using a visual board to track daily tasks can immediately see when work is behind schedule or if a bottleneck is forming. These visuals prompt quick discussions, align the team, and reduce the need for endless status meetings. Visibility creates accountability and shared ownership.

Lean Tip #3862 – Respect for People is the Core of Lean

Respect is not just a value—it’s a system of behaviors. In Lean, respecting people means involving them in decisions, listening to their ideas, and equipping them with the skills and tools to succeed. Without respect, Lean becomes a hollow set of tools.

When employees feel valued, they contribute ideas freely, take ownership of problems, and support one another. Respect also means recognizing contributions, protecting work-life balance, and ensuring improvements make jobs safer and more satisfying. Continuous improvement and respect go hand-in-hand.

Lean Tip #3863 – Uncover Root Causes with the 5 Whys

Surface-level fixes rarely solve long-term problems. The “5 Whys” method helps teams dig deeper to identify the root cause. By repeatedly asking “why” after each answer, you often move past symptoms to the underlying issue.

For instance, a late shipment might initially seem like a scheduling problem. But after asking “why” several times, you may uncover an issue with inaccurate inventory counts. Fixing the inventory system solves not only the late shipment but also prevents future errors. Root cause thinking saves time and prevents frustration.

Lean Tip #3864 – Celebrate Problems as Opportunities

Many organizations hide or punish problems. In Lean, problems are treasures because they point to where improvements are needed. Leaders should create an environment where employees feel safe to surface issues without fear of blame.

When teams see leaders celebrating the discovery of problems, it shifts the culture. Instead of sweeping issues under the rug, employees will proactively raise them. This mindset transforms problems into opportunities for learning, growth, and innovation.

Lean Tip #3865 – Empower the Frontlines to Lead Change

Frontline employees know processes best because they live them daily. Empowering them to experiment, suggest changes, and test improvements unleashes creativity and ownership. Instead of waiting for top-down fixes, frontline-driven change happens faster and sticks longer.

Practical ways to empower include giving teams small budgets for improvements, celebrating implemented ideas, and providing coaching rather than answers. When employees know they are trusted to make changes, engagement rises and results improve.

Lean Tip #3866 – Measure What Truly Matters

Metrics drive behavior—but only if they measure the right things. Too often, organizations track vanity metrics that don’t reflect value for customers. Lean emphasizes leading indicators tied to flow, quality, and customer satisfaction.

For example, measuring how quickly issues are resolved is more meaningful than tracking how many issues are logged. When employees see how their daily work connects to meaningful metrics, they feel accountable and motivated to improve performance.

Lean Tip #3867 – Create a Culture of Learning and Curiosity

Lean is fundamentally about learning. Mistakes, experiments, and adjustments are part of the process. Leaders must model curiosity by asking questions, encouraging experimentation, and rewarding effort—not just results.

A learning culture treats failures as stepping stones. When employees see that lessons are valued as much as outcomes, they are more willing to try new ideas. Over time, this mindset fosters adaptability, resilience, and innovation.

Lean Tip #3868 – Make Improvement a Daily Habit

Continuous improvement isn’t an occasional workshop—it should be built into daily work. Even five minutes a day to identify problems, test small changes, or reflect on lessons learned can transform performance over time.

Leaders should set expectations that improvement is part of every role. Daily team huddles, quick reflection sessions, and visible tracking of small wins reinforce the idea that improvement is ongoing. Over time, this habit becomes part of the culture.

Lean Tip #3869 – Lead as a Coach, Not a Commander

In Lean, leadership shifts from directing to developing. Leaders act as coaches who grow their team’s problem-solving skills. Instead of providing solutions, they ask questions like: “What do you see? What’s the root cause? What options could we test?”

This coaching approach builds capability and confidence. Employees learn to think critically, take ownership, and solve problems independently. When leaders remove barriers and guide rather than dictate, teams become stronger and more resilient.

Lean Tip #3870 – Progress Over Perfection: Just Start

Perfection is the enemy of progress. Waiting for the perfect solution delays improvement and discourages action. Lean emphasizes experimentation: try something small, learn from it, and adjust.

Quick, imperfect changes create momentum. They demonstrate that improvement is possible and encourage further ideas. Over time, these small, imperfect steps add up to transformational results. In Lean, action beats hesitation every time.

 

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Monday, September 29, 2025

Lean Roundup #196 – September 2025


A selection of highlighted blog posts from Lean bloggers from the month of September 2025.  You can also view the previous monthly Lean Roundups here.  


Fear and Futility: Two Barriers to Improvement (and How Leaders Can Remove Them) – Mark Graban explains how fear and futility undermine improvement and what leaders can do to eliminate these barriers.


What is your “OK Zone?” – Mark Rosenthal introduces the concept of the “OK Zone” to encourage learning and growth outside of one’s comfort zone.

Mendomi: The Well-Being of Japanese Employees – Christopher Roser explores Mendomi, the Japanese approach to employee well-being, and its importance in lean workplaces.


What Is the Lean Practitioner Program and Why It Matters – Alen Ganic outlines the Lean Practitioner Program and why it is essential for building capability and sustaining improvement.

The Battles We Have to Win: Fear – Pascal Dennis reflects on fear as a central battle leaders must win to create trust and enable continuous improvement.

Strategy Deployment for the 21st Century – Bruce Hamilton shares how strategy deployment must evolve in the 21st century to align organizations and engage employees.

Why Technical Solutions Fail Without People: Reflections from 30 Years in Operations – Mark Graban highlights why technical solutions often fail without addressing the human and cultural side of operations.


Lean Is about the Work: Enhance Value-Creating Work to Truly Transform End-to-End, Value-Stream Performance – Josh Howell and Mark Reich argue that Lean is fundamentally about enhancing value-creating work to transform value-stream performance.


How I’ve Aimed to Share the Uncommon Knowledge of Lean Product and Process Development – Larry Navarre describes his efforts to spread the uncommon knowledge of Lean product and process development.

Excellence Isn’t an Accident: Mentorship as the Engine of Mastery – James Morgan emphasizes that excellence is driven by mentorship, which serves as the engine for mastery.

The Design Brief | What Most Companies Miss about the Role of Chief Engineers – Lex Schroeder explains what many companies miss about the role of chief engineers in design.


Plan, Do, Check, Act… or Plan, Do, Cover Your A? Leadership Makes the Difference – Mark Graban contrasts genuine PDCA with superficial “Plan, Do, Cover Your A” behaviors, stressing leadership’s role in real learning.


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Friday, September 26, 2025

Lean Quote: If You Want to Be Interesting, You Have to Be Interested

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.


"You have to be interested. If you’re not interested, you can’t be interesting.  —  Iris Apfel

I think the quote works on two levels. When you become more interested in other people—actively listening to them and engaging with them—they’ll see you as more interesting.

This saying highlights a fundamental principle of social interaction: genuine curiosity about others is more appealing than trying to be the center of attention. By actively listening and showing interest in what others have to say, you create a more engaging and positive experience for everyone involved, ultimately making you more likable and memorable.

Try these easy techniques to be more interested:

Focus on Others

When you're genuinely interested in others, you shift the focus away from yourself and onto them. This makes them feel valued and heard, which is a powerful way to build rapport and create connections.

Active Listening

Being interested involves actively listening to what others say, asking follow-up questions, and showing that you're engaged in the conversation. This demonstrates attentiveness and thoughtfulness.

Positive Feedback Loop

When you show interest in others, they are more likely to reciprocate and become interested in you. This creates a positive feedback loop where both parties feel valued and engaged.

Learning and Growth

Being interested also allows you to learn from others, expand your knowledge, and gain new perspectives. This continuous learning makes you more interesting in the long run.

Building Stronger Relationships

When you prioritize genuine interest over self-promotion, you build stronger and more meaningful relationships with others. This is because people are drawn to those who make them feel seen, heard, and appreciated.

In essence, the quote encourages us to cultivate a mindset of curiosity and empathy, which leads to more engaging and rewarding social interactions.


Wednesday, September 24, 2025

10 Keys for Lean Daily Management















10 Keys for Lean Daily Management: Driving Continuous Improvement

Organizations often start their lean journey with Kaizen workshops, aiming for quick wins. However, many see improvements fade over time because lean depends on people consistently applying the tools. Tools like standard work succeed only when individuals understand, care, and use them daily.

Lean daily management (LDM) focuses on creating habits and routines that embed lean principles into everyday operations. It’s not just about tools—it’s about engaging people, fostering accountability, and ensuring continuous improvement.


What is Lean Daily Management?

Daily management is a structured approach where everyone—from leaders to frontline staff—takes ownership of productivity, quality, and communication. By implementing Gemba walks, leader standard work, and visual management, organizations ensure alignment and empower teams to improve processes consistently.


10 Keys to Lean Daily Management

Key

Focus Area

Purpose / Benefit

KPIs That Matter

Metrics that drive results

Identifies bottlenecks and improvement opportunities to optimize production, quality, and cost.

Setting Standards

Clear expectations

Makes goals visible, allowing leaders to guide and correct behaviors efficiently.

Visual Displays

Transparency & alignment

Boards display KPIs, targets, and improvement ideas to keep teams informed and accountable.

Daily Huddles

Team communication

Short meetings at visual boards promote discussion, alignment, and quick updates.

Gemba Walks

On-the-floor observation

Leaders observe processes firsthand, identify problems, and support employees directly.

Problem Solving

Expose & resolve issues

Encourages the open identification and addressing of problems, fostering learning and improvement.

Coaching

Continuous guidance

Leaders mentor teams to sustain behaviors, reinforce learning, and encourage proactive improvement.

Accountability Tracking

Assignments & follow-up

Converts observations into actions and ensures completion, embedding discipline in processes.

Leader Standard Work

Structured leadership tasks

Leaders engage daily, model lean behaviors, coach teams, and remove barriers to improvement.

Everyday Communication

Frequent two-way dialogue

Maintains trust, empowers employees, and ensures information flows efficiently across the organization.


Why Lean Daily Management is Essential

  • Sustains Kaizen Workshop Gains – Ensures improvements do not fade over time.

  • Engages Leaders – Daily routines and Gemba walks keep leadership active in improvement processes.

  • Empowers Teams – Huddles and visual boards give teams ownership of their work and results.

  • Drives Continuous Improvement – Problems are addressed promptly, boosting productivity and quality.

  • Builds Organizational Culture – Encourages habits that embed lean thinking into everyday work.


How to Implement Lean Daily Management

Step

Action

Identify Key Metrics

Select KPIs that measure critical aspects of production and quality.

Define Clear Standards

Set clear expectations for each task and communicate them to the team.

Create Visual Boards

Display metrics, targets, and improvement ideas visibly.

Conduct Daily Huddles

Hold short meetings to review performance and plan next actions.

Perform Gemba Walks

Leaders observe processes and support staff on the floor.

Track Accountability

Convert observations into actionable tasks and follow up.

Coach Continuously

Encourage proactive problem-solving and mentor employees.

Review & Adjust

Leaders evaluate processes and adjust actions as needed.


Final Thoughts

The true strength of lean lies in its people, not just its tools. By applying the 10 keys of lean daily management, organizations build daily routines that drive consistent improvement. Practices like Kaizen workshops, Gemba walks, leader standard work, and clear communication foster accountability, empower teams, and cultivate a culture of continuous enhancement. Organizations embracing LDM can tackle challenges quickly, solve problems effectively, and sustain high-performance operations. Over time, daily management becomes a habit, turning short-term gains into lasting success.



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