This DVD will make it easy for your entire workforce to comprehend all of the principles of 5S with examples of Sort, Set-in-order, Shine, Standardize, and Sustain being explained in detail, and how they can be applied at your business.
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
New 5S DVD To Get You Focused on Eliminating Waste
This DVD will make it easy for your entire workforce to comprehend all of the principles of 5S with examples of Sort, Set-in-order, Shine, Standardize, and Sustain being explained in detail, and how they can be applied at your business.
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Coaching for Safe Behavior
Observe…Take a few minutes every day to observe people working and their behaviors. When observing, remember you are not looking for just risky actions, but also for safe behaviors to support or encourage.
Analyze…Think about why your co-worker might be doing what they're doing. Use the ABC Model to help figure out why:
A = Activator
B = Behavior
C = Consequences
An Activator directs a Behavior which leads to a Consequence that either encourages or discourages us to perform the behavior.
Help…There are many ways to help people be safer and incident free. One way to help is to educate and teach; another way to help is to offer assistance. You and your co-workers must rely on each other to choose safe actions or behaviors. Helping everyone to act safely requires a team effort.
When people sense you truly care about them, and you want to listen to what they have to say, you make them feel valued. Then they will be much more willing to accept your input.
If you do all these things, you will be a great COACH. When everyone in a workplace is a coach, the whole team wins.
This coaching process is clearly relevant for improving behaviors in areas other than safety and in settings other than the workplace.
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Friday, January 8, 2010
Quote of the Day January 8, 2010
Feel free to share some of your favorites here as well.
"A person who never made a mistake never tried anything new. " - Albert Einstein
Learn how making failure acceptable is an important factor when changing the culture to support continuous improvement.
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
American Innovation Challenging Business Once Dominated By France
So what does this have to do with Lean? Well the key to the wine manufacturers success is at the heart of Lean Thinking.
Some of the key phrases from the video include:
Experiment & learn something
Try something new - Innovate
Micro-management stiffles innovation
Too many rules are restrictive
New technology feeds new innovation
As you watch the video US Wine Industry Gaining Ground look for these key Lean concepts.
What wasn't mentioned in the video but had to be done was meeting the customers expectations. The US manufacturers developed wines that the market needed and wanted resulting in profits from repeated business.
As the wine industry demonstrated in this video your business can do the same thing. Think Lean. Experiment, learn, try again, break down walls, empower people, and innovate products and services customers want.
I hope you enjoy this since I think it is always nice to reflect on a good story of American ingenuity.
Monday, January 4, 2010
Ten New Years Resolutions for Lean Managers
Friday, January 1, 2010
Quote of the Day January, 1, 2010
Feel free to share some of your favorites here as well.
"If you don't know where you are going, you will probably end up somewhere else." ~Lawrence J. Peter
It is important to remember as you start this New Year you start with a vision of what you want to accomplish. Whether it is a personal New Year's resolution or a new business objective you need to set a goal or target condition. From this a plan can be made to achieve your goal. You can then monitor your progress toward your goal and adjust accordingly. In 2010, think Lean, have a vision, and use PDCA otherwise it is anyone's guess where you'll end up.
Jamie Flinchbaugh wrote a nice post on New Year's Resolutions. He recommends forgoing the resolution in favor of planning and action. Check out his advice on goal setting before you tackle your own.
Monday, December 28, 2009
Sustainability: Ten Factors for Making Culture Change Stick
Previously, I discussed creating a Lean culture and characteristics of effective change management and I am going to talk about sustaining this change. Simply, sustainability is about lasting change. Sustainability is discussed often and one of the great issues in management, never mind Lean. We have all seen facts related to the low rates of sustaining change or seen news about a company who lost its way.
Charles Darwin said "It is not the strongest species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the ones who are most responsive to change" which holds true for culture change.
Below are ten factors that will help any organization make the change they make lasting.
Capability – Management must employ the time and resources necessary for change.
Intention – Determination and drive for the cause is required. You must insist we make the change and be determined to keep it up.
Success – People feel happier and perform better when there is a feeling of success and vice versa. Attitude drives performance so managers must project confidence.
Hard Work – It is hard to keep it going. This is entropy. Without it, the system runs down.
Emphasis on the team not the individual – In the
Many small wins, rather than the occasional big win – Small wins keep up the enthusiasm, and certainly add up. Management needs to continually recognize small wins.
Attitude toward failure – Everyone fails from time to time, but what is crucial is the attitude toward failure: do you punish or do you treat it as part of learning?
Motivation – Sustainability requires interest and involvement of all employees. Ask "What gets rewarded around here? Build a culture to support improvement.
Discipline – Make it a habit. Without good disciple the system will not be maintained. Management must teach discipline and correct lapses with respect for people as they occur.
Performance measures – It is true you get what you measure, drive good behavior. Performance measures need to be aligned with what you want to achieve. Think long term.
There is no such thing as self-sustainability, it requires ongoing effort. To quote Jack Welch, 'People always ask, 'Is the change over, can we stop now?' You've got to tell them, 'No, it's just begun!''