"Amateurs work until they get it right. Professionals work until they can't get it wrong." ~Author Unknown
This quote resounds of Lean Thinking. One of the premises of Lean is to make it right the first time. The truth is people make mistakes.
In Lean organizations, mistakes are seen as opportunities to improve. There is no blame game if something goes wrong. People are not rewarded for how few mistakes they make, but on how well they improve the process when mistakes have occured. Management bears the responsibility for creating effective systems that prevent mistakes.
To do this we need to understand the circumstances that led to the error. The answer may be to evaluate standard work, make sure no steps are omitted, or to poka yoke (mistake proof) the process. Don't make the mistake of believing every error requires a "device" to prevent recurrence.
The goal needs to be about making the work easier by thinking about the process as Taiichi Ohno says:
Lean professionals continually work to prevent the opportunity for errors since quality is of utmost value to the customer.
The goal needs to be about making the work easier by thinking about the process as Taiichi Ohno says:
“Why not make the work easier and more interesting so that people do not have to sweat? The Toyota style is not to create results by working hard. It is a system that says there is no limit to people’s creativity. People don’t go to Toyota to ‘work’ they go there to ‘think’.”
Lean professionals continually work to prevent the opportunity for errors since quality is of utmost value to the customer.
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