Tag Archives: kaizen

Five Minute Lean – Use Kaizen and Kaizen Events to Help Stakeholder Buy-In

Five Minute LeanThis is an excerpt from the book "Five Minute Lean", by David McLachlan - a wonderful book that blends teaching of the tools, culture and philosophy of traditional Lean with a modern-day Lean parable.

You can get the whole book on Amazon here and enjoy your own copy.

Use Kaizen and Kaizen Events to Help Stakeholder Buy-In

‘Kaizen, and Improvement Events get the right people involved all at once, to properly define the problem and map the path to a solution using Lean tools.’

The term “Kaizen” is Japanese for improvement, or continuous improvement.

A Kaizen Event, therefore, means an “improvement meeting”.  It often involves a few front-line staff from the process involved, a few people who are not familiar with the process to get an outside perspective, and sometimes a few people from the leadership team.  Your team use any of the tools they need to from this book, to reveal problems, discover opportunities and make a solid case for change.

If everyone is already familiar with the concepts (and with a book like this in everyone’s hands, they should be), then it is much easier to get everything down on paper quickly.  It could be started over a cup of coffee with someone involved in the process, or integrated into an existing regular weekly meeting with a team of front-line staff.

Ensuring front-line team-mates and leaders are involved with your Kaizen events will also help you get one of the most important and often the most elusive things: stakeholder buy-in.  The more input someone has into something, the more likely they are to support it.  As you take them through the steps, you are not only building their skill-set, but helping them be a real part of the solution.

This is why Steve was so insistent on Lisa getting her team-mates involved when starting with her current state map.

By itself, Kaizen or continuous improvement should be a regular part of your week, including “every person, every day” in stopping when there are problems (4.2), defining them using the customer driven metrics (1.2), getting to the real cause of the problem (3.3), and checking ideas to fix them.  Even small ideas that warrant a “just do it” test (easily done using Agile, 5.3) to quickly see if they work, can get things underway.

Figure 2: A Lean practitioner leading a Kaizen Event, involving people who do the process every day.

Five Minute LeanThis is an excerpt from the book "Five Minute Lean", by David McLachlan - a wonderful book that blends teaching of the tools, culture and philosophy of traditional Lean with a modern-day Lean parable.

You can get the whole book on Amazon here and enjoy your own copy.

Selected chapters from the story within Five minute Lean:

Check out these selected chapters from the teachings within Five Minute Lean:

Standard Work and Kaizen: Two Sides of the Same Coin

Describing Lean to people can be both extremely easy, and extremely hard.

Easy because many people brush over it in a sentence, and tell their audience of the massive increase in quality and reduction in time it takes to do the work that Lean can bring.

Hard because the depth of Lean, once you really get into it, is massive.  Yes, it is a method for improving your business, and your work processes, and it can increase quality and reduce delivery times significantly.  But it is also a mindset change, where team-mates embed a problem solving and continuously improving culture that supports the tools.

If you are talking to someone with even the slightest knowledge of Lean tools and practices, however, I’ll make it easier for you.  That’s because I can sum it up in two concepts: Standard Work, and Kaizen.

Standard Work

It’s hard to improve something that you don’t have.  That is why it’s important to have a standard, repeatable process in place before you set about improving it.  While this might seem like a mundane or ordinary thing, very few companies actually have it (or even know how important it is to have).

Michael Gerber called it out in his best selling book “The E-Myth, Revisited”.  He used the term “operating manuals”, but it doesn’t matter what you call them.  If you don’t have Standard Work in your job or business, there’s a good chance you will have to hire or work with expensive “experts” with their own knowledge and way of doing things, or rely on people who have been doing the job for years.  Their methods may not even mesh with what you want, and certainly may not match the work culture you already have in place.

With a good standard operating procedure, a person off the street should be able to come in and do the job with a minimum of training.

Kaizen is Continuous Improvement: Every Person, Every day

Kaizen is the term for continuous improvement in Japanese, and when we have a stable, standard process, it is our aim to work on improving it.

We do this by calling out problems as quickly as possible – anything that slows it down, causes re-work, waiting, unnecessary inventory (pretty much any of the eight wastes).  It means supporting a culture that celebrates problems instead of hiding them, that error proofs the process or at the very least stops work if something is not right.

Put Together, They are Unstoppable

So we have standard work, then we improve it.  This creates a better process, and we can improve that.  This creates a better process again.  As we progress, lead times go down.  Re-work goes down.  Complaints go down.   Costs go down.  Morale goes up.  Customers are happier.

And suddenly, you find yourself enjoying your job again.

Yours in change,

David McLachlan

Kaizen and Kaizen Events: Lean Glossary

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Kaizen: What Is It?

Kaizen is the Japanese term for “Improvement” and is most often referred to as continuous improvement in English terms.  It applies to a few areas of Lean, such as:

Every Person, Every Day Kaizen

Kaizen every day means Increasing the capability of our team-mates so they are trained to discover and define problems in our process, allowing us to fix them quickly (then work towards putting a long term fix in place).

Kaizen Bursts

Noted on a Value Stream Map, these are ideas for solutions or additional challenges called out during the value stream mapping process, that we note especially.  Noting Kaizen burst ideas ensures we don’t forget these things later on.

Kaizen Events

A Kaizen event is usually a three to five day event that involves team-mates from the front line process and a handful of people unrelated to a process.

We often go through the full Lean transformation during the event, mapping out a process with queues and rework noted, calling out any wastes, performing fishbone analysis or the 5 whys to get to the root cause of problems, using a Pareto Chart to show us where to start, line balancing to balance the flow, and finally putting it all together in a “Future State” value Stream Map that shows a new process and the potential time and dollar savings.

Some companies prefer to hold mini Kaizen events, where team-mates go through the process more quickly (often within one day) or perform different analysis over multiple meetings.

By David McLachlan

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