More Related Content More from TKMG, Inc. (17) Leading Improvement: The Skills You Need2. Welcome!
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Teacher at University of California, San Diego
Author & Speaker:
Karen Martin, President
The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
@karenmartinopex
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2013 Shingo Prize winner! 4. Webinar Focus
1.Help deepen your understanding about:
–What Lean actually is
–The full spectrum of mindsets and skills you need to function at top levels
2.Help you assess your current level of proficiency and recognize your blind spots.
3.Provide the means for you to develop a personal development plan. 5. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Improvement Professionals’ Varied Roles
Role
Primary
Focus
Objective
Practitioner
Doing
Results
Facilitator
Leading others in doing
Primary - results;
Secondary - people development
Coach
Teaching others how
to do
Primary - people development;
Secondary - results
6. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Improvement Facilitators Wear Many Hats 7. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Know Thyself 8. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Beware of The Dunning-Kruger Effect
The Outstanding Organization, p. 14
The Problem: Cognitive Bias
•Most people lack the meta-cognitive capacity to properly evaluate their own performance.
•“Blind spot”
Dual burden
•Erroneous choices
•Inability to recognize the problem 9. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Begin with
the end in mind
Habit #2 – Stephen Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People 10. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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What problem are we trying to solve? 11. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Problem = Gap between where you are and where you want or need to be
Level of proficiency with improvement knowledge & skills
You:
Future State
You: Current State
Organizational Performance
PROBLEM
Target Condition
Current Condition 14. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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What is Lean?
•Lean is a business management approach that focuses on creating products, improving operations, and developing people to deliver customer value and create prosperity, while consuming the fewest possible resources. 15. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Common Misunderstandings About Lean
•Misunderstanding
–Lean focuses on waste reduction and speed; Six Sigma focuses on quality and variation reduction.
•Fact
–Lean is a holistic performance improvement methodology; quality is at the core. The heavy emphasis on time forces quality problems to the surface for resolution.
16. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Common Misunderstandings About Lean
•Misunderstanding
–Lean is qualitative; Six Sigma is quantitative (data driven).
•Fact
–Lean is heavily based on fact-based decision making, but aims to avoid the common trap of analysis paralysis. (Has a bias to action, followed by iterative improvement cycles.) 17. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Common Misunderstandings About Lean
•Misunderstanding
–Lean doesn’t rely on statistical tools.
•Fact
–Lean relies on using whatever you need to use to properly solve the problem at hand. 18. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Common Misunderstandings About Lean
•Misunderstanding
–Lean doesn’t rely on precise measurement.
•Fact
–Lean honors accuracy over precision when precision isn’t necessary to make a decision. (Has a bias to action, followed by iterative improvement cycles.) 19. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Common Misunderstandings About Lean
•Misunderstanding
–Lean is a method for improving processes.
•Fact
–Lean is an overarching business management approach that includes process improvement. 20. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Common Misunderstandings About Lean
•Misunderstanding
–Lean is a tool.
•Fact
–Lean is an overarching business management approach. 21. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Common Misunderstandings About Lean
•Misunderstanding
–Lean is events based (a series of mapping and rapid improvement activities).
•Fact
–Lean organizations have a strong culture of daily improvement, and use traditional projects for complex improvement, and use “events” on a selected basis for making targeted rapid improvement. 22. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Summary: Common Misunderstandings About Lean
Category
Misunderstanding
Fact
Lean vs. Six Sigma
Lean focuses on waste reduction and speed; Six Sigma focuses on quality and variation reduction.
Lean is a holistic performance improvement methodology; quality is at the core. The heavy emphasis on time forces quality problems to the surface for resolution.
Lean is qualitative; Six Sigma is quantitative (data driven).
Lean is heavily based on fact-based decision making, but aims to avoid the common trap of analysis paralysis. (Has a bias to action, followed by iterative improvement cycles.)
Measurement
Lean doesn’t rely on statistical tools.
Lean relies on using whatever you need to use to properly solve the problem at hand.
Lean doesn’t rely on precise measurement.
Lean honors accuracy over precision when precision isn’t necessary to make a decision. (Has a bias to action, followed by iterative improvement cycles.)
Purpose
Lean is a method for improving processes.
Lean is an overarching business management approach that includes process improvement.
Lean is a tool.
Lean is an overarching business management approach.
What Lean “Looks” Like
Lean is events based (a series of mapping and rapid improvement activities).
Lean organizations have a strong culture of daily improvement, and use traditional projects for complex improvement, and use “events” on a selected basis for making targeted rapid improvement. 23. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Why the Umbrella? And what do I mean by “overarching management approach”? 24. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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The Toyota Triangle
Philosophy
People
Adapted from figure in Mark Graban’s Lean Hospitals, p. 21, which is adapted from Gary Convis’s article, The Role of Management in Lean Manufacturing Environment 25. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Karen’s Lean Management Triangle
Principles
People 26. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Principles Practices Tools
Lean Management 27. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Principles
•Customer-defined value & eight wastes
•Value streams / value stream alignment
•Flow & pull
•Continuous improvement (kaizen); seek perfection
•Visualize and solve problems
•Humility
•Respect for people
•Total employee involvement 28. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Practices
•Robust problem solving up, down and across the entire organization
–Via detailed PDSA – plan, do, study, adjust
•Strategy deployment (hoshin kanri)
•Go and see (Gemba) management
•Consensus building (nemawashi)
•Reflection (hansei)
•Iterative continuous improvement
•Visual management 29. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
Tools
•Analysis
–Data analysis
–Visually displaying data
–Value stream mapping
–Process mapping
–Spaghetti diagrams
–Root cause analysis
•Five why’s
•Problem trees
•Cause-and-effect diagrams
•Pareto charts
–Video
–Documentation review
–Interviews
–Surveys
•Countermeasures
–5S
–Batch size reduction
–Changeover & setup reduction
–Cross-training / multi-functional workers
–Cellular layout / co-location
–Error proofing & quality at the source
–Load leveling / demand smoothing
–Pull systems (one piece flow, Kanban systems, FIFO lanes)
–Work balancing via takt time
–Work standardization
–Visual management
•Executing Improvement
–Projects
–Just do it’s
–Kaizen Events
•Process Management
–Key performance indicators
–Process documentation
–Visual job aids
–Process flow charts
–Process ownership
–Process monitoring 30. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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“The Big Guns”: Analysis tools you should be aware of, know when you need them, and have a resource you can turn to:
•ANOVA
•Control Charts
•Design of Experiments (DoE)
•Failure Mode Effects Analysis (FMEA)
•Hypothesis testing via F-tests and T-tests
•Scatter plots & regression analysis
•Standard deviation calculations 34. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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You MUST Read
www.ksmartin.com/reading-list 35. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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The Lean Classics: A Brilliant Beginning
1996
Little mention of PDCA, leadership or culture
2004
Doesn’t address how Lean applies outside of manufacturing
1999 No mention of tying value stream improvement to overall business strategy 36. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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You MUST Be Coached 38. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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We Need Improvement Apprenticeships! 40. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Certificate vs. Certification
Certificate Program (attendance-based)
Certificate Program (assessment/demonstration-based)
Certification
Awarded by educational programs or recognized parties
Awarded by educational programs or recognized parties
Awarded by a standard-setting organization
Typically results in a physical certificate
Typically results in a physical certificate
Results in credentials; typically results in a designation to use after one’s name
High variation in course content & requirements
High variation in course content & requirements
Standards are set through a defensible, industry-wide process (job analysis/role delineation that results in an outline of required knowledge and skills)
Is the end result; demonstrates attendance at a program
Is the end result; demonstrates knowledge of course content at a point in time
Typically has ongoing learning requirements in order to maintain via annual CEUs or equivalent
Information obtained from:
•My thesis for my master’s degree in education (adult learning)
•University of Michigan - http://www.sph.umich.edu/distance/certificate_vs_certification.html 41. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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The Only Lean Certification 42. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Buyer Beware: Very Little Lean 43. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Buyer Beware: Very Little Lean 44. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Buyer Beware 45. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Questions Before Investing in a Program
•What new knowledge and skills do I need to acquire?
•Will this program lead to the acquisition of the knowledge and skills?
•Is this the best way to acquire the knowledge and skills?
•What will I be able to do as a result of engaging in the program that I cannot do now?
•Is the program content validated by industry-recognized experts?
•How will my new knowledge and skills be assessed in order to earn the certificate? 46. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Attend Workshops and Conferences 47. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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View and Attend Webinars & Online Learning 48. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Read Blogs 49. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Get on Social Media 50. We are working on a
comprehensive skills inventory
Subscribe to be notified when ready: www.ksmartin.com/subscribe 51. © 2014 The Karen Martin Group, Inc.
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Thank you!
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