Wednesday, October 25, 2017
2 Second Lean 3rd Edition Book Review
Paul Akers, founder and president of FastCap, has published his first book 2 Second Lean: How to Grow People and Build a Fun Lean Culture at Work and at Home. I have been following Paul for several years as he has built FastCap into one of the model Lean Companies in this modern age. So now that Paul has published his story I was delighted to take the opportunity to learn more.
2 Second Lean is different than most books on the marketing written about Lean manufacturing/thinking. This book isn’t really about Lean or continuous improvement but rather the transformation of a leader. The story chronicles one man’s personal journey with the discovery of Lean and how he implemented it in his business and personal life. This personal touch makes the lessons Paul presents more relevant and lasting.
Paul describes his personal journey beginning with a total ignorance of Lean thinking, all the way to being one of Lean's greatest success stories. Paul illustrates the struggle many organizations face when their understanding of Lean is centered only around tools. To quote Paul, “Using Lean as only a tool will leave you disappointed. It is much more than that.” He learns from Domo Arigoto, Vice President of Lexus, “The most important thing for Toyota is people – teaching and training people in a culture of continuous improvement.” This is the turning point for Paul and FastCap.
In 2 Second Lean Paul outlines the steps that he personally used to transform the culture of FastCap. His approach may be a bit unorthodox as he advocates starting in the bathroom but it is simplicity that he is after. Throughout the book Paul breaks down the concepts and thinking into simple easy to understand lessons.
This book is a very quick read but offers a number of great resources buried within its covers. There are lots of colorful photos and examples throughout the book. If that wasn’t enough Paul even uses QR Codes to link to information and videos on his websites for more detailed learning. The end of each chapter concludes with “The One Thing” which is a synopsis of what you just learned which is followed up by questions to make you act on your own situation. This reinforces the lessons and substantiates the learning for readers.
There is an audio version of the book that recorded. This is a real treat to listen to since Paul is such a passionate personality. Anyone who knows Paul knows the energy he brings to this topic. Paul goes off script from the book but adds great value. Since the stories are so personal he ad libs throughout the recording adding some new tibits to ponder.
Paul says’, “At the end of the day everyone is a process engineer.” If you want something to stick as a leader you must expect it, inspect it, and reinforce it. Paul has simplified a rather complex process down into a simple phrase: "Identify what bugs you and fix it." Paul shows us that Lean can and should be fun.
In the 3rd edition Paul added 5 new chapters which basically answer common questions he gets. There a is a chapter on Lean Leadership why you want a Lean All-Star. Paul talks about the use of videos to put Lean on afterburners. He also shares his new building and how Lean thinking was incorporated in the design. There is also a chapter on touring his company FastCap.
I highly recommend reading this book and even further endorse the audio portion. You will find 2 Second Lean a fun, memorable, and valuable account into Lean. This story and its lessons is something everyone can benefit from personally and professionally.
Monday, September 24, 2012
2 Second Lean Book Review
2 Second Lean is different than most books on the marketing written about Lean manufacturing/thinking. This book isn’t really about Lean or continuous improvement but rather the transformation of a leader. The story chronicles one man’s personal journey with the discovery of Lean and how he implemented it in his business and personal life. This personal touch makes the lessons Paul presents more relevant and lasting.
Paul describes his personal journey beginning with a total ignorance of Lean thinking, all the way to being one of Lean's greatest success stories. Paul illustrates the struggle many organizations face when their understanding of Lean is centered only around tools. To quote Paul, “Using Lean as only a tool will leave you disappointed. It is much more than that.” He learns from Domo Arigoto, Vice President of Lexus, “The most important thing for Toyota is people – teaching and training people in a culture of continuous improvement.” This is the turning point for Paul and FastCap.
In 2 Second Lean Paul outlines the steps that he personally used to transform the culture of FastCap. His approach may be a bit unorthodox as he advocates starting in the bathroom but it is simplicity that he is after. Throughout the book Paul breaks down the concepts and thinking into simple easy to understand lessons.
This book is a very quick read but offers a number of great resources buried within its covers. There are lots of colorful photos and examples throughout the book. If that wasn’t enough Paul even uses QR Codes to link to information and videos on his websites for more detailed learning. The end of each chapter concludes with “The One Thing” which is a synopsis of what you just learned which is followed up by questions to make you act on your own situation. This reinforces the lessons and substantiates the learning for readers.
There is an audio version of the book that recorded. This is a real treat to listen to since Paul is such a passionate personality. Anyone who knows Paul knows the energy he brings to this topic. Paul goes off script from the book but adds great value. Since the stories are so personal he ad libs throughout the recording adding some new tibits to ponder.
Paul says’, “At the end of the day everyone is a process engineer.” If you want something to stick as a leader you must expect it, inspect it, and reinforce it. Paul has simplified a rather complex process down into a simple phrase: "Identify what bugs you and fix it." Paul shows us that Lean can and should be fun.
I highly recommend reading this book and even further endorse the audio portion. You will find 2 Second Lean a fun, memorable, and valuable account into Lean. This story and its lessons is something everyone can benefit from personally and professionally.
Wednesday, September 2, 2020
Book Review: Lean Travel
Paul Akers is the founder and president of FastCap, a product development company specializing in woodworking tools and hardware for the professional builder. Paul is an energetic speaker whose core passion is helping people discover their full potential and showing others how to implement Lean in their business and personal life.
Paul learned to
embrace adventure and pursue excellence from his father when he earned the rank
of Eagle Scout at the young age of 14. About 10 years ago, Paul decided that he
wanted to become a world-class giver. From experience in order to have a great
travel experience, you must approach it from the standpoint that you are going
to treat all the people you encounter with dignity and respect, understanding
that they are working hard to help you have a great trip. If you regularly give
them your respect, your smile, your encouragement, and your gratitude, your
travel will be a blessing!
In addition to
being grateful, another way to make your travel experience more fulfilling is
to live by the adage that "less is more". In a Lean Travel context,
this means travel light. simple two-second improvement can make travel more
effective and enjoyable.
Paul is now an
avid traveler and shares his advice and tips for making travel easy and
efficient in his book “Lean Travel”. He ties everything back to lean concepts
and the 8 forms of waste.
To make it
easier for readers, Paul includes a section that explicitly summarizes it into
just one simple concept. For example, in his first book, 2 Second Lean, the
goal was to teach the reader to “learn to see waste.” In his second book, Lean
Health, he said he wanted you to “treat your body like you would treat a
Ferrari.” With Lean Travel, he wanted to show you how to “travel light and with
a grateful heart.”
As you start
this book, there are two main parts of his philosophy understand. First, what
you give in the travel experience will have a profound impact on how much you
enjoy it. Second, the less you bring and the lighter you travel, the more you
will be able to feel and adapt to the fantastic trade winds of the travel
experience. So travel with a full heart and a light suitcase!
This book
teaches you how he applied Lean principals in an edgy way to improve every
aspect of the way he travels. If you love travel and adventure you’ll enjoy the
stories and tips to make your next trip better. If you are Lean enthusiast like
Paul and myself they’ll enjoy the application of lean thinking in a personal
way.
Paul offers the
book for free online with many resources and videos to support his teachings.
If you have a chance to listen to the audio you’ll enjoy the many off script
additions that show his personality and make it an adventure.
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Lean and Metrics The FastCap Way
1) Make Lean so simple anyone can understand it.
2) Fix what bugs you and improve it everyday.
3) Every employee must make a 2 sec improvement everyday.
4) People fail sometimes and solutions may not valid but you learn from that.
5) Create a routine like: start day with Sweep, Sort, Standardize, then improvement time, then morning meeting.
6) Give people time everyday to experiment, train, and teach.
7) Simple metrics –
a) 1 improvement everyday
b) Orders out in 2 hours
c) Less than 1 mistake a week
d) Want customers to rave about us
8) Defects are something the customer sees.
9) Develop the skill and capacity to solve problems by everyone everyday.
Here is Paul in his own words:
Paul says he likes Lean compared to other methodologies because it is focused on the individual, respect for their creativity, and brings them into the process on a daily basis.
What do you think? Did Paul Akers get it right?







Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Lean and 5S at Home with Paul Akers
In a recent video by Paul, he again takes us home to share lessons on Lean. He focuses on using 5S elements to organize his home office and bathroom. These improvements center around making tasks easier therefore saving him time.
Hopefully, you are applying continuous improvement thinking in your life and this will give you some ideas for your home and office.







Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Goal: 2 Second Improvement Every Day for Life
In this video Paul explains what 2 second Lean means and how this works to transform your environment for a lifetime.
What do you think does Paul Akers have the right approach?
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Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Paul Akers Shares Tips for Morning Meetings
Paul shares a number of tips about establishing your own morning meeting.







Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Lean Defined by Paul Akers
Lean is seeing the eight wastes and then eliminating them through deliberate, consistent, endless, relentless, fanatical continuous improvement of everything you do everyday for the rest of your life to serve your customer.
Paul says this is the most important video he has produced. What do you think?






