Registration is now open for our "Kaizen Live!" event, where you can visit Franciscan St. Francis Health in Indianapolis to see what a "culture of continuous improvement" is like in a way that will help you in creating the same for your organization.
Feb 13, 2017•4 min
Today's Post in&t;50 Words: I continue sharing documents from the Don Ephlin library archive. What did Ford and the UAW learn when they visited Japan in 1981? Many of the things that made Japanese industry successful are the same things that make organizations successful with Lean today, including in healthcare. http://www.leanblog.org/audio180
Feb 12, 2017•10 min
Today's post points to my guest blog post for the W. Edwards Deming Institute: Reflections on Dr. Deming's Hospital Notes - What Has Changed Since 1990? Why do the same problems that Dr. Deming experienced as a patient 30 years ago still happen so often today? http://www.leanblog.org/audio179
Feb 02, 2017•10 min
This post in&t;50 words: Are there parallels between medicine and organizations when we look at the tension between heroism and the sometimes boring work of preventing problems and improving things? I comment on an article... http://www.leanblog.org/audio178
Jan 30, 2017•10 min
Lean sometimes gets, I think, an unfair rap that it's only a method for incremental improvement. See this article, from the NEJM website, for example: "Limits of Lean -- Transformative Care Redesign Must Go Beyond Typical Lean-Based Improvements." http://www.leanblog.org/audio177
Jan 29, 2017•8 min
http://www.leanblog.org/audio176 I saw this article a few days ago in one of the larger healthcare industry trade publications:How One Woman Saved IU Health $54 Million The headline is misleading, as addressed in the opening sentence / sub-headline of the story (via HealthLeaders): "With a little help from about 10,000 of her friends and colleagues, the head of Indiana University Health's office of transformation leanedin to cut waste and encourage value, one project at a time." That's more like...
Jan 25, 2017•8 min
When I talk to organizations about Kaizen, or continuous improvement, there's far too much self-defeating talk, where people say things like:"We're not going to try this Kaizen process because our culture isn't ready yet." That's not only self-defeating, it's self-fulfilling prophecy. If you don't work on continuous improvement, you'll never have a culture of continuous improvement. http://www.leanblog.org/audio175
Jan 19, 2017•5 min
Yesterday, the W. Edwards Deming Institute published the second in my series of three posts for them: "The Failure of "The Livonia Philosophy" at my GM Plant." Read more... http://www.leanblog.org/audio174
Jan 17, 2017•7 min
In my travels, I often meet people or visit organizations that say something like:"We're doing Lean... we just call it Process Improvement." They have a "Process Improvement" (PI) department, or they call it "Continuous Process Improvement" (CPI). They have people in roles like "Process Improvement Facilitators." While process improvement is great, in using a term like that,there's perhaps a risk that they miss the full and complete essence of Lean and, therefore, don't get the results that they...
Jan 16, 2017•5 min
http://www.leanblog.org/audio172 StoreSMART is partnering with me on this contest where you can win one of four sets of books, along with a selection of sample supplies that can help you with 5S, visual management, and other Lean methods.By January 31, 2017, we'll select four winners who will each get a set that includes: Lean Hospitals, 3rd Edition (signed by Mark Graban) Work That Makes Sense (signed by Gwendolyn Galsworth) The Batz Guide for Bedside Advocacy (a great patient safety guidebook)...
Jan 15, 2017•3 min
It's a weight loss program called "Lean 13." It's the everyday use of the word "lean," as in thinner, that has nothing to do with the Lean methodology and the Toyota Production System. They're promising that you'll lose 13 pounds in the first month.As with the Lean methodology, in hospitals, factories, or wherever, your results might vary based on a number of factors. For example, Nutrisystem can't stop a customer from supplementing their food with Buffalo wings and chocolate milkshakes. We have...
Jan 11, 2017•4 min
My favorite book, as I've written about before, is not a "Lean book" -- it's Understanding Variation: The Key to Managing Chaos by Donald J. Wheeler, PhD. It might look like a book about statistics... http://www.leanblog.org/audio170
Jan 09, 2017•7 min
I'm extremely honored that The W. Edwards Deming Institute published my first blog post in a series of three that I've written for them, to be published over the next month or so.The post is titled: "Why Dr. Deming's Work is So Important to Me" http://www.leanblog.org/audio169
Jan 06, 2017•9 min
Before Christmas, I was listening to the Dan Le Batard Show and their guest for the day was former NFL player Domonique Foxworth, pictured at left. Foxworth earned an MBA from Harvard Business School after his playing days. He's the perfect participant in a smart show about sports and whatever.During one segment, they all talked about NFL offensive and defensive coordinators and how they often fail when promoted to a head coach position.... and the discussion seemed relevant to other types of or...
Jan 04, 2017•6 min
I had a chance to visit one of their community hospitals, Hillcrest Hospital, as well as the main campus. It was a very stimulating visit and it was great to see the progress they were making in building a "culture of improvement." http://www.leanblog.org/audio167
Jan 02, 2017•11 min
"Making mistakes is better than faking perfection."I saw this quote the other day and tweeted it. It seemed like food for thought and something to reflect on for a new year. A Google search doesn’t lead to a clear creator of this quote… it’s a common thought that has been around a long time, I guess.
Jan 01, 2017•3 min
http://www.leanblog.org/audio165 I get annoyed by corporate euphemisms, such as referring to people as "resources," the term "right-sizing" for layoffs, and the type of jargon and babble parodied in the Weird Al song "Mission Statement."Using unclear language can intentionally mask and hide reality, or sometimes it's just another form of incompetence. You might know about the recent Wells Fargo scandal (as I blogged about here). The bank is trying to make amends for customers being harmed by unn...
Dec 20, 2016•5 min
It's a bit of a modern management cliché to say "Don't bring problems! Bring me solutions!" I think what that means is "Don't just complain! Think about improving things!" It's good to think about improvement, but sometimes (if not often!) that improvement process starts by identifying problems. In a "Kaizen" process in a team, I encourage people to bring problems forward even if they do NOT have a solution or "countermeasure" in mind. When somebody points out a problem, that can prompt discussi...
Dec 18, 2016•4 min
I first blogged about this article back in 2009 and it's still online:"Keen to Be Lean" The sub headline talks about hospitals being "desperate to cut costs." Has that changed? I wish the motivation was more often about hospitals being "desperate to improve patient safety and quality." Lean can address that too and should be mentioned, even in a publication for CFOs.
Dec 14, 2016•10 min
http://www.leanblog.org/audio162 Dr. W. Edwards Deming used to warn against replacing intrinsic motivation with extrinsic rewards and incentives.Brian Joiner (author of Fourth Generation Management), who worked with Deming, warned that setting targets and quotas can lead to three things: improving the system, distorting the system, or distorting the numbers. It’s often easier to distort the system or the numbers than it is to actually improve. We’ve seen that happen (gaming the numbers) in situa...
Dec 12, 2016•9 min
I was happy to see an engineer (Chemical Engineering) and a General Motors leader, Alicia Boler Davis, on the cover of the Northwestern University alumni magazine.See this profile and story: "DRIVING GM" http://www.leanblog.org/audio161
Dec 11, 2016•7 min
In the Lean approach, we don't call people idiots or dummies. We don't say, or shouldn't say, things like "idiot proofing" or "dummy proofing."There's an old Toyota story about how the term "fool proofing" upset an employee, they switched to using the equivalent of "mistake proofing" or "error proofing." Read more about the story in a comment on an old blog post of mine. Terms like mistake proofing help us focus on the process and the system instead of blaming individuals. Instead of labeling pe...
Dec 06, 2016•6 min
http://www.leanblog.org/audio159 I do a lot of work across the U.S., but I've also been very fortunate to work with hospitals, clinics, and health systems around the world over the past 11 years.It started with a few trips to Canada to conduct some hospital lab assessments and Lean leadership training when I worked for a J&hospital consulting group. Then, came an opportunity to spend about eight weeks working with a hospital north of London in 2008, a fascinating opportunity.In recent years,...
Nov 17, 2016•7 min
A few weeks ago, I saw this announcement about Dean Gruner, MD, the second CEO to lead ThedaCare during their Lean journey:Dr. Dean Gruner, ThedaCare President and CEO, Announces Retirement "Dean Gruner, MD, president and CEO of ThedaCare since April 2008, today announced his plans to retire. Dr. Gruner began in healthcare 40 years ago, has served this community for 33 years, and has served as President and CEO of ThedaCare since April 2008." Congratulations and best wishes to Dean on his retire...
Oct 28, 2016•7 min
I was happy to see this announcement the other day:UCSF to Train Residents in Lean Management and Process Improvement From the announcement: “UC San Francisco will train medical residents and fellows in Lean management principles, as part of a broader institutional commitment to continuous quality improvement. The effort is being supported inpart with a grant from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) through its Pursuing Excellence in Clinical Learning Environments in...
Sep 27, 2016•3 min
You might remember the hubbub (a kerfuffle?) over the NEJM opinion piece written by Dr. Jerome Groopman and Dr. Pamela Hartzband. See my first post about their article. There are more links at the bottom of this postNow, the "Perspective" section of the New England Journal of Medicine has published a piece titled "The Hard Work of Health Care Transformation" by Dr. Richard Bohmer. Check it out. Dr. Bohmer says "government and regulators influence" (or attempt to influence, I'd add) healthcare or...
Sep 06, 2016•8 min
More notes and discussion about my trip to China. http://leanblog.org/audio155
Jul 28, 2016•8 min
http://leanblog.org/audio154 Continuing from Part 1 of my post about my first day of my first China trip, I'd like to share more about the Lean healthcare conference and presentations that took place.In the next presentation from a Chinese hospital, the speaker started talking about the need to "improve [patient and employee] satisfaction through Lean management" and that "we have the same goals and purpose" as I expressed in my presentation... namely safety, quality, waiting times, cost, andemp...
Jul 26, 2016•11 min
Audio courtesy of Quality Digest Live -- see www.QualityDigest.com for more info and http://www.leanblog.org/audio153 for the link to the article referenced.
Jul 25, 2016•11 min
We'll probably also talk about this article that was published yesterday on QualityDigest.com:"Lean Is About Quality, Not Just Speed or Efficiency... in Factories or in Hospitals" It might ruffle some feathers, but oh well. I'll stand by what I say here as factual, not just opinion: http://leanblog.org/audio152
Jul 24, 2016•9 min