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Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Show Your Employees Some Love



It’s February 14th and if that date doesn’t ring a bell, you must live under a rock. It’s Valentine’s day!

Whether you “believe” in Valentine’s Day or not, it’s the perfect occasion to show some appreciation to someone special and your employees would probably be delighted and surprised if you took the time to show them some love this Valentine’s day!

Here are 6 Ways you can Show your Employees some love this Valentine’s Day!

1. Verbal recognition – Share a little praise for a job well done.

2. A handwritten note of appreciation – This is powerful. I’ve seen employees keep a note from their boss for years. Some even display it on their desks.

3. Snack time – Surprise employees with a snack of some kind. It can be a chocolate bar, an ice cream sandwich, or anything special. Be sure to remember employees who might have food allergies.

4. Teambuilding – A game or teambuilding activity is always fun and memorable.

5. Take the team to lunch – An hour away from the office to enjoy a meal with your team can build better relationships and morale.

6. Free coffee – Nothing says “I love you” more than a Starbucks gift card. Okay, that’s a bit of a stretch, but people do love their Dunkin!

All of these tips require very little effort but have a large payoff. After all, people who feel appreciated are not only likely to put more effort into their work – they’re more likely to stay at their current job for a longer period of time! So this Valentine’s Day, go ahead and let your employees or coworkers know that you really do appreciate all of their hard work – and then reward them for it!

Does your company use Valentine’s Day as a time to show appreciation?


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Monday, February 12, 2024

5 Ways to Accelerate Your Lean Roadmap



Many organizations have begun the journey to make their businesses lean. Some have reported early successes while others have struggled or fallen into the rut entitled "flavor of the month." As is usually the case with this kind of organization change, implementation precedes understanding. What follows are missteps, rework, confusion, organizational angst, and the aforementioned "flavor of the month" criticism.

As you continue your Lean Journey here are 5 ways to accelerate your roadmap:

Start With Lean Training for Everyone

The key to implementing any new idea or concept is training. It must be top down training so that everyone is on the same page. The more understanding of what lean manufacturing is all about, why you are implementing it and the expected benefits from it, the more likely you are to get buy-in.

It is very important that everyone in the company become committed to lean culture. In order to make the culture successful, managers and employees need to be aware of waste within the company and be prepared to attack and eliminate it. Making sure that the employees are empowered to do this, not just pushing the job off on someone else, is imperative in the proper function of lean culture.

Ensuring everyone is on the same page will help to avoid conflict. At the same time, it is important to ensure people have the space in which to think about what improvements they think need making.

Use Daily Management to Engage Employee in the Gemba

Lean organizations make use of Daily Management systems, a structured process to focus employee’s actions to continuously improve their day-to-day work. Daily Management empowers employees to identify potential process concerns, recommend potential solutions, and learn by implementing process changes. Daily Management, if done right, can be a critical tool in any organization’s toolbox to engage frontline staff in problem-solving and to deliver customer value.

Lean Daily Management includes three components: (1) alignment of goals and effort; (2) visual data management, daily huddles, and problem-solving; and (3) leader standard work.

Focus on Problem Solving

One of the most common mistakes that companies make when embarking on a Lean transformation is trying to do too much at once. These “boil-the-ocean” initiatives are long, costly and often end up stalling under the weight of their own ambition.

The PDCA cycle (Plan-Do-Check-Act) is a simple and effective framework for lean problem-solving. It guides your employees through four steps: defining the problem and its scope, implementing a solution and testing its results, evaluating the outcome and identifying any gaps, and standardizing the solution and making further adjustments.

Empower Improvement with Kaizen

Kaizen events are a powerful improvement tool because people are empowered to come up with new ideas to help the business. Employees are isolated from their day-to-day responsibilities and allowed to concentrate all their creativity and time on problem-solving and improvement.

The purpose of kaizen is to involve everyone, everywhere, every day in making simple improvements. These small improvements add up overtime and result in an extraordinary and never-ending transformation of processes. Companies which use Kaizens have found they generate energy among those who work in the area being improved, and produce immediate gains in productivity and quality.

Seek Expert Help from Lean Sensei

A Lean coach or sensei provides the necessary guidance, support, and expertise to help organizations navigate their journey successfully. They guide teams in adapting to new ways of working and help them overcome any challenges encountered in the process based on their extensive experience and knowledge of Lean. They help organizations identify inefficiencies in their processes and implement effective solutions.

The challenge with lean is that, despite its attraction to many executives who want to cut costs and increase productivity, a lean process doesn’t happen overnight. There are plenty of obstacles to overcome.


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Friday, February 9, 2024

Lean Quote: Willingness to Constantly Accept Critical Feedback

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.


"There has to be a willingness to constantly accept critical feedback and rapidly iterate to make things better.  —  Sam Yagan

Praise and constructive criticism help to develop and improve employee performance. At work, managers use critical feedback to improve the standard of work by creating an atmosphere that nurtures growth and support. If you're a manager or employer, learning how to give critical feedback effectively can help improve employees' overall productivity.

Tips for giving feedback:

Make time

  • Regardless how busy you are, create a feedback calendar and take it seriously!
  • If you become aware of a “positive” or “negative” action, acknowledge it immediately


Make it honest and meaningful

  • Be prepared to provide specifics about both negative and positive feedback
  • Think in terms of praise and constructive criticism – both contribute to growth


Use goal tracking

  • If you don’t know how to get started, review how the individual has helped (or hindered) the achievement of organizational or team goals


Discuss and document the top 3 strengths and 3 growth opportunities

  • For the strengths, try to leverage them and keep them sharp
  • For the growth opportunities, determine what actions can be implemented immediately, which require assistance (ex. Training/mentoring), and have a plan for tracking progress


Commit to supporting continual learning

  • Review what in house programs are available
  • Ensure your budget adequately includes development opportunities
  • Investigate external training that can address your focus areas

 

Feedback is critical for individual growth and for organizational success but it’s not always easy to give or to receive.

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

Tips for Running Effective Daily Management Meeting


Lean organizations make use of Daily Management systems, a structured process to focus employee’s actions to continuously improve their day-to-day work. Daily Management empowers employees to identify potential process concerns, recommend potential solutions, and learn by implementing process changes. Daily Management, if done right, can be a critical tool in any organization’s toolbox to engage frontline staff in problem-solving and to deliver customer value.

Here are my tips for running an effective daily management meeting.

Segregate Meetings With Management Levels (Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3)

It is important to segregate meetings with management levels (tier 1, tier 2, tier 3) because it allows for more focused and efficient communication within each level. Each level of management has different responsibilities, expertise, and decision-making authority, and holding separate meetings allows each level to discuss issues and make decisions that are most relevant to their respective roles.

Tier 1 meetings typically involve front-line supervisors and focus on day-to-day operations and problem-solving. Tier 2 meetings involve middle managers and focus on longer-term planning and strategy. Tier 3 meetings involve senior executives and focus on high-level strategic planning and decision-making.

Meet In Person Near the Gemba

These meetings should be conducted on the shopfloor in a safe area where communication is easily heard. While there are many digital solutions these days I prefer the manual versions.

Set a Time Limit

Time is of the essence in a factory, and employees often have limited time to spend in meetings. Therefore, it’s essential to keep these meetings short and focused. Aim for a maximum of 15 to 30 minutes and prioritize the most critical issues that need to be discussed.

Start with Positive News

Starting the meeting on a positive note can set the tone for the rest of the meeting. Begin by sharing any good news, such as meeting production targets, or recognizing team members for their hard work.

Safety is Next Concern

Safety is a top priority in any factory, and daily huddles provide an opportunity to discuss any safety concerns or near-misses that have occurred. Discussing safety measures can help prevent future incidents and ensure the safety of all employees.

Don’t Solve Problems in Real Time

An effective daily huddle makes it so someone can acknowledge that they can help a fellow team member without turning it into a troubleshooting session.

Capture Action Items

When action items are assigned, they should be owned by the person responsible for them. This should include specific tasks that need to be completed before the next meeting or when it will be completed.


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Monday, February 5, 2024

5 Continuous Improvement Ideas to Try Out

Maybe you don’t have buy-in from Executive leadership for a Lean transformation or maybe you do. You know your organization can fall behind the competition if you aren’t actively looking for ways to streamline and improve processes. One way you can combat this is by implementing continuous improvement or Kaizen. If you’re looking for ways to create a better organization, I’ve listed some continuous improvement ideas to try out.

1. Training & Development

If there’s one thing you should have for continuous improvement, it’s training and development. Training programs are one of the improvement tools that can give your employees more opportunities for development, growth, and engagement. It also provides an avenue to train them with the skills and knowledge your organization needs its workforce to have. For example, you can train them about process improvement training or business approaches like the Six Sigma and Lean to secure customer satisfaction and cost reduction. You can also take advantage of this program to teach them the best business practices to better execute current strategies and find ways to improve on them.

2. Daily Huddles

Daily huddles take place at the value stream level and last for about 10 to 15 minutes. Huddles are led by the leader and are attended by all members of the value stream. Huddles take place directly in front of the visual board so that the metrics that are displayed on the board can be discussed and updated as needed.

The purpose of daily huddle is to make everyone collaborate at a common platform, take charge and ownership of each and every aspect, for example, improving production, productivity, material availability, etc., and most important is the increasing communication.

3. Standard Work

Standard work is a written description of how a process should be done. It guides consistent execution. At its best, it documents a current “best practice” and ensures that it is implemented throughout a company. At a minimum, it provides a baseline from which a better approach can be developed.

The definition of standard work is “the most effective combination of manpower, materials and machinery”. Standard work is the method, and thereby you have the four Ms of manufacturing (manpower, material, machinery, methods). Standard Work is only “the most effective” until the standard is improved.

4. Value Stream Mapping

Value stream mapping is a tremendously valuable tool for improving a process. Well suited for a broad range of industries and processes. A value stream map (VSM) illustrates the flow of materials and information as a product or service moves through a process.

Value-stream mapping is a useful tool for grasping the current situation and for planning improvements. A current state value-stream map depicts the current situation as is. A future state value-stream map depicts what the value stream should look like after planned improvements have been implemented.

Kaizen is a Lean manufacturing tool that improves quality, productivity, safety, and workplace culture. Kaizen focuses on applying small, daily changes that result in major improvements over time. Although improvements under Kaizen are small and incremental, the process brings about dramatic results over time.

5. Hold a Kaizen

Beyond the obvious benefit of improving processes, holding a Kaizen event can foster problem-solving, collaboration, and communication skills and allow employees to demonstrate leadership. Engaging team members to identify problems and suggest improvements in their work areas encourages a sense of ownership over their work, which can improve overall motivation, morale, and productivity. Finally, holding a Kaizen event is one way to reinforce a robust culture of continuous improvement within your organization, after all, the best way to sustain the principles that you want to guide your company is to put them into practice.

You can try one of these or all of these. You’ll see benefits from these continuous improvement ideas and perhaps even spark a Lean transformation with your success.


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Friday, February 2, 2024

Lean Quote: Adopt a Growth Mindset

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.


"I think it’s very important to have a feedback loop, where you’re constantly thinking about what you’ve done and how you could be doing it better.  —  Elon Musk 

This is what tech entrepreneur Elon Musk refers to as his single best piece of advice. We should always be thinking about how we can evolve and grow, and this is why a culture where people practice giving and receiving feedback every day can be so powerful. It’s about having a growth mindset, where we see our skills as adaptable and believe they can be developed upon. And the good news is, we can all learn to adopt a growth mindset.

Building a new solutions and products is a highly innovative and creative process. Things simply don't go to plan all the time, setbacks and failures are inevitable along the way. What makes a difference is how a team deals with them. Each failure is an opportunity to reassess, make a change and try a different approach. In order to succeed, teams must become resilient to failure and focus on the learning outcomes that they present. When we feel that it is safe to fail we are more likely to try risker experiments, and sometimes these riskier experiments have huge payoffs.

The concept of the growth mindset was developed by the psychologist Carol Dweck and popularized in her book, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success. Dweck proposes that people deal with failure in two very different ways depending on their mindset. Some people have a fixed mindset and others with a growth mindset.

People with a fixed mindset believe their intelligence and talent are fixed traits. They believe that talent alone creates success without effort. They don't deal well with setbacks and they try to hide their mistakes.

In contrast people a growth mindset believe that their abilities and talents are just a starting point and that they can be developed through dedication, hard work and learning. They are keen to learn from the people around them. They respond positively to failure and are best described in one sentence: "I can't do that...yet".

Growth Mindset

Fixed Mindset

Failure is an opportunity to grow

I can learn to do new things

I like to try new things

Inspired by the success of others

Embraces challenges

Failure is the limit of my abilities

I'm either good or bad at something

I stick to what I know

Threatened by the success of others

Gives up easily

Teams that operate with a growth mindset have a much more malleable view of success. They do not view failure as a reflection of their ability but rather as a starting point for experimentation and testing of new ideas. They have a passion for learning and improving themselves and their team. They strive for continuous improvement and never give up.

Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Lean Roundup #176 – January, 2024



A selection of highlighted blog posts from Lean bloggers from the month of January 2024.  You can also view the previous monthly Lean Roundups here.  

 

The Pearls and Turds of Continuous Improvement – Kevin Meyer illustrates keys points of continuous improvement in small sequential steps and learning from failure from the documentary Stutz he recently watched.

 

What Conversations Does Your VSM Drive? – Mark Rosenthal discusses how the values stream map can change the conversation in your organization and drive continuous improvement.

 

Mastering Mistake-Proofing: Insights from Toyota’s Poka Yoke Approach – Mark Graban discusses Toyota's revolutionary approach to mistake-proofing, a concept that has redefined workplace efficiency and quality.

 

Many Ways to Win – Bob Emiliani says the passing of time, experience, and facts prove that we, collectively, were wrong to think of Lean management as a replacement for classical management on a widespread basis, given that there are many ways to win in business.

 

Embracing System-Level Problem Solving over Firefighting – John Knotts explores the paradigm shift from individual, ad hoc problem-solving to systemic approaches that empowers every employee to be a hero in their domain.

 

Complexity is a Crude State, Simplicity Marks the End of a Process of Refinement – Pascal Dennis explains the issues of complexity within strategy and advocates for simplicity.

 

Keep Calm and Stop the Line—Part 1 & Keep Calm and Stop the Line—Part 2 - Christoph Roser explains the reasons why you would want to stop the production line.

 

New Competency #3: How We Learn, Develop, and Improve - Christopher R Chapman reviews Peter Scholtes’ six new leadership competencies by taking a look at the third entry, Understanding How We Learn, Develop, and Improve; Leading True Learning and Improvement.

 

Why We Care So Much About Continuous Process Improvement - Maggie Millard shares 12 reasons why process improvement is so important and it’s role in different industries.

 

Are You Organized for Leadership? - Josh Howell reflects on a recent learning tour to Toyota and GE Appliances, sharing insights the group gathered about lean transformation.

 

Things I Have Learned – Bob Emiliani shares his learning about people and systems over the last 15 years in the Lean community.

 

Mastering Mistake-Proofing: Insights from Toyota’s Poka Yoke Approach – Mark Graban discusses Toyota's revolutionary approach to mistake-proofing, a concept that has redefined workplace efficiency and quality.

 

Cultivating a Culture of Learning: Overcoming Fear and Futility in Problem-Solving – Mark Graban shares a recent mistake he made that illustrates the two elements necessary to overcome these mistakes.

 

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