Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Kaizen, as a mindset, can be seen everywhere. Yes, even mixed martial arts. Kenny Florian, an up-and-coming, lightweight shares how he’s risen up the ranks in the lightweight class: I’m real blessed to be able to fight for the UFC and have them [...]
Kaizen
Following the Introduction to Kaizen below are articles below show Kaizen in practice through real-world examples, applications, and tips for holding your own Kaizen event effectively and successfully.
What is Kaizen?
Kaizen is a daily song, the purpose of which goes beyond simple productivity improvement. It is also a process that, when done correctly, humanizes the workplace, eliminates overly hard work (“muri”), and teaches people how to perform experiments on their work using the scientific method and how to learn to spot and eliminate waste in business processes. In all, the process suggests a humanized approach to workers and to increasing productivity: “The idea is to nurture the company’s human resources as much as it is to praise and encourage participation in kaizen activities.” Successful implementation requires “the participation of workers in the improvement.” People at all levels of an organization participate in kaizen, from the CEO down to janitorial staff, as well as external stakeholders when applicable.
The format for kaizen can be individual, suggestion system, small group, or large group. At Toyota, it is usually a local improvement within a workstation or local area and involves a small group in improving their own work environment and productivity. This group is often guided through the kaizen process by a line supervisor; sometimes this is the line supervisor’s key role. Kaizen on a broad, cross-departmental scale in companies, generates total quality management, and frees human efforts through improving productivity using machines and computing power.
While kaizen (at Toyota) usually delivers small improvements, the culture of continual aligned small improvements and standardization yields large results in the form of compound productivity improvement. This philosophy differs from the “command and control” improvement programs of the mid-twentieth century. Kaizen methodology includes making changes and monitoring results, then adjusting. Large-scale pre-planning and extensive project scheduling are replaced by smaller experiments, which can be rapidly adapted as new improvements are suggested.
Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn In May 2010, Jeff Bezos held a press conference where he fielded questions about environmental stewardship and what Amazon.com is doing about it. Here are a few key points and how Jeff Bezos and Amazon.com are using the principles of Lean thinking toward [...]
Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn The true spirit of Kaizen isn’t just about improving the organization, but it is also in teaching, guiding, and in effectively stretching people beyond their current capabilities. Indeed, it is in developing people and in increasing their capability to contribute and add value. [...]
Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Taiichi Ohno is credited with having said: When there is no standard, there is no Kaizen In other words, when a process is performed unsystematically in different ways, then: There can be no basis for comparison (before/after) One cannot objectively tell if there [...]
Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Systems that are internally consistent and externally pragmatic stem from just a few rules. Systems with exceedingly many rules typically fail or will not endure. For example, Most mathematical truths stem from just a few axioms Music stems from just a handful of [...]






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