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.
When it comes to habits David Mann tells the story of Smokey the Bear’s campfire rules. Douse the fire with water, stir the coals and turn them over, then douse again. Not following the rules of Smokey the Bear you risk the fire restarting itself from the live embers that remain. Cultural habits are very much the same way.
A simple model for improvement could include unhook, change, and re-hook. Where the 3 steps of the process are defined:
Unhook – is the process of learning to change the activities in an organization. Create a situation whereby change is allowed to occur.
Change – this is where the actual improvement is implemented.
Re-hook – is about sustaining the new system by making new connections. Use techniques like standard work, visual control, and visits to the Gemba build new ways of doing things.
Without unhooking the old system we leave live embers that can be restarted at the first sign of difficulty. Change is hard and there will be challenges. To be successful and ensure the old fire doesn’t restart we must learn to improve. When you face a new problem in your new system don’t break the rules or revert back to old thinking. Use your Lean thinking to solve this new problem and improve your system. And whatever you do don’t run two systems in parallel. Sometimes in an attempt to be cautious we are really just confusing the situation. Be brave and embrace the change if you want to improve.
A Lean Journey 





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