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Straight Talk: Avoid the Con of Quick and Easy Lean

Lean is a strategic initiative that will require at least three to five years for any organization of size. It is a lifestyle change, not a diet.

(The following was published earlier today in Industry Week’s Continuous Improvement newsletter)

I recently spoke to the head of lean implementation at a large European-based manufacturing and engineering organization. He is discouraged. Contrary to his advice, the senior executives just agreed to purchase the services of a major consulting firm to implement lean.

What they bought were a series of quick and simple kaizen events in which the participants would do A3 problem-solving, and the consultants guaranteed quick financial results. The executives were assured that it would require no burden on their part, just verbal and financial support (for the consultants) and the consultants would handle everything else.

Simple. No problem.

These executives were led to believe that they would then be “doing lean,” Toyota Production System and all that good stuff. There is one thing I can absolutely guarantee you, in addition to the sun rising tomorrow. They will NOT be doing lean or TPS!!

Quick and easy solution = quick and easy sell. Unfortunately, more and more executives are being duped into what is essentially a scam.

Let’s be honest about this problem. Many senior executives suffer ADD (attention deficit disorder) and lack the tenacity, vision or as Dr. Deming would say, the constancy of purpose, to implement significant change in the culture and processes of their organizations. Feeding them quick and easy solutions is like selling dope to a drug addict.

Here are some clues to avoiding the scam:

On the other hand, here is some straight talk about implementing lean:

Ray Kroc did it too. Ray Kroc spent half of his time visiting McDonald’s locations, and when he did, if the bathroom was dirty, he grabbed the bucket and mop and cleaned it. That was when he was chairman, with tens of thousands of stores. You may think he was crazy, but he did it. He built one of the most significant corporations in the world around a few core values (quick, clean and courteous), and he demonstrated their importance through his own behavior.

You need to do it!

And, one more thing: Straight talk, absolutely honest, frank and open conversation about both problems and successes, is a necessity of developing a lean culture. In fact, it is an absolute necessity of any healthy organization, family, community or country. It requires straight talk both to and from leaders.

Comment:

If you detect a note (or a shout!) of sarcastic annoyance in the above you are right. That is a response to a pattern I have seen over and over again from the most prestigious and largest consulting firms. During the TQM days I was working at Inland Steel and one of these prestigious firms was employed there claiming they were implementing TQM. They formed teams of employees to do little more than identify how many heads could be cut. That was their goal, not any change in process or culture. It didn’t take long for employees to catch on. And, they called it TQM. It was nothing of the kind. Now I am seeing that exact same pattern from that same firm and others. I am frankly sick of this exploitation. It needs to stop and someone needs to call them on it. If they really want to implement lean or TQM then they should learn what it really is and have the intellectual honesty to confront the executives of their clients with the real commitment and change in behavior that it will require of those executives. And, that will not appeal to those addicted to quick and easy solutions. It is a fundamental of consulting ethics that you do not simply sell a client what they think they want. You have a moral obligation to tell them what they need, which is often much more difficult and a harder sell.

Also, this is not a condemnation of consultants in general. After all, I am one. And, I know and would recommend many other consultants who have integrity and skill and are not appealing to this quick and easy addiction.

Well, I am glad I got that off my chest!

Have a great day!

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