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Common Components of the A3
Report Plan Theme: ________________________________ Background Do, Check, Act Owner: ________________________________ Countermeasures / Implementation Plan Current Condition Effect Confirmation Target Condition / Measurable Objectives Follow-up Actions Root Cause & Gap Analysis
Common Components of the A3
Report Plan Theme: “What is our area of focus?” Background Do, Check, Act Owner: Person accountable for results. Countermeasures / Implementation Plan • Problem statement • What? • Context - why is this a problem? • Who? • When? Current Condition • Where? (if relevant) • Diagram of current situation or process • What about it is not ideal? • Extent of the problem (metrics) Target Condition / Measurable Objectives • Diagram of desired state • Measurable targets – how will we know that the improvement has been successful? Effect Confirmation • What measurable results did the solution achieve (or will be measured to verify effectiveness)? • Who’s responsible for ongoing measurement? Follow-up Actions Root Cause & Gap Analysis • Graphical depiction of the most likely direct (root) causes • Where else in the organization can this solution be applied? • How will the improved state be standardized and communicated?
Common Components of the A3
Report Plan Do, Check, Act Theme: “What is our area of focus?” Background Owner: Person accountable for results. Countermeasures / Implementation Plan • Problem statement • What? • Context - why is this a problem? • Who? • When? Current Condition • Where? (if relevant) • Diagram of current situation or process • What about it is not ideal? • Extent of the problem (metrics) Target Condition / Measurable Objectives • Diagram of desired state • Measurable targets – how will we know that the improvement has been successful? Effect Confirmation • What measurable results did the solution achieve (or will be measured to verify effectiveness)? • Who’s responsible for ongoing measurement? Follow-up Actions Root Cause & Gap Analysis • Graphical depiction of the most likely direct (root) causes • Where else in the organization can this solution be applied? • How will the improved state be standardized and communicated?
Common Components of the A3
Report Plan Theme: “What is our area of focus?” Background Do, Check, Act Owner: Person accountable for results. Countermeasures / Implementation Plan • Problem statement • What? • Context - why is this a problem? • Who? • When? Current Condition • Where? (if relevant) • Diagram of current situation or process • What about it is not ideal? • Extent of the problem (metrics) Target Condition / Measurable Objectives • Diagram of desired state • Measurable targets – how will we know that the improvement has been successful? Effect Confirmation • What measurable results did the solution achieve (or will be measured to verify effectiveness)? • Who’s responsible for ongoing measurement? Follow-up Actions Root Cause & Gap Analysis • Graphical depiction of the most likely direct (root) causes • Where else in the organization can this solution be applied? • How will the improved state be standardized and communicated?
Coaching vs. Mentoring Coach Mentor
Purpose Growth/development; helping people realize their potential, while also generating results Role Teacher/consultant; learning/thinking partner Relationship Built on respect and trust; supportive in nature Process Drawing out knowledge that resides within coachee Sharing knowledge that resides within mentor Questioning; coach engages Telling; Mentor shares in inquiry to guide the expertise, offering answers coachee and solutions Focus Primary: Developing strong problem-solvers Secondary: Assuring the problem is thoroughly dissected and solved Primary: Assuring the problem is thoroughly dissected and solved Secondary: Developing strong problem-solvers
Types of Coaching Owner’s Problem-Solving
Skill Level Focus During Session What to Ask / Do Problem-solving is spot on. Coaching Goal: “Thought partners” “How’s it going?” “What’s working well?” “What’s not?” “What have you learned?” “What’s been most surprising?” “What are you doing next?” “Do you need any help?” Problem-solving is off course and needs correction. Coaching & Mentoring Goal: Get person back on track Probe using Socratic questioning. Focus on one or two areas of the A3. Problem-solving is on track so far, but owner’s having difficulty taking next steps. Coaching & Mentoring Goal: Build confidence; remove obstacles; create an action plan Use Socratic questioning to help person realize his/her strengths & grow competencies; provide mentoring for knowledge transfer (e.g. specific tools).