How Moviemakers Schedule Shoots
michelbaudin.com

For all the scheduling experts who have been wondering how moviemakers schedule shoots, the current exhibition about the late German-French film actress Romy Schneider at the film festival palace in Cannes provides two examples from director Claude Sautet: Les Choses de la Vie (“The Things of Life”, 1970), later remade in the US as Intersection. […]

7
Observing Lean Evolve
bobemiliani.com

Lean practice has evolved over the last 20 years, as one would expect. But has it evolved in a positive way? Has Lean practice, overall, improved with time? Today we see Lean accounting, Lean administration, Lean communication, Lean CFO, Lean distributors, Lean government, Lean healthcare, Lean HR, Lean IT, Lean leadership, Lean logistics, Lean office, Lean […]

9
Competition in Higher Education
bobemiliani.com

A recurring theme among faculty in public higher education is criticism of the “student as customer” viewpoint held by administrators, politicians, and others. Most of the criticism misses the mark in two important ways: A failure to recognize the shift in higher education that occurred, mid-1990s to present, from a sellers’ market to a buyers’ market. In […]

8
Learning To Think
bobemiliani.com

We can all sympathize with the demands placed on people who occupy top leadership positions. It can be grueling 24 x 7 x 365 work requiring one’s total devotion to the job. In most cases, that means responding to one emergency after another. And they likely dealt with daily emergencies as they ascended the hierarchy. […]

5
Surviving the Competition
bobemiliani.com

Do online M.B.A. degree programs have the potential to eliminate business schools, especially lower-ranked business schools? It does, according to the article “Half of U.S. Business Schools might Be Gone by 2020” (Bloomberg BusinessWeek, 14 March 2014). The driver for this potential future outcome is the entry into online MBA programs by top-tier business schools. […]

10
Problem-Solving Behind the Front Line
bobemiliani.com

One of the marvelous aspects of Lean management is the focus on front line problem-solving, at the points where value is created for customers. Structured problem-solving is the focus of supervisors and front line workers to improve flow. Great things can happen when problems are recognized and corrected at the source. For many organizations undergoing […]

9
“Sales Over Safety, Profit Over Principle”
bobemiliani.com

Toyota’s settlement with the U.S. Government over misleading investigators about the sudden acceleration problem illustrates that nobody is immune from information flow problems. According to published reports, Toyota people misled investigators by denying the problem existed, but internal company records showed Toyota knew of the problem. It is unfortunate when people are harmed by products, […]

9
What Employers Want – Part 3
bobemiliani.com

In a previous post, I described how managers’ view of college graduates’ unpreparedness for work could instead reflect problems with internal processes related to hiring. The focus of that post was technical knowledge and work skills. The focus of this post is interpersonal and related skills that are needed for valuable higher order skills such […]

2
Learning From Mistakes
bobemiliani.com

Big-name Lean consultants, trainers, thought leaders, educational organizations, etc., talk a lot about the importance of making mistakes as a prerequisite for learning. Yet, you rarely hear them talk about any mistakes they’ve made and what they have learned from them. You hear them talk only about successes – lots of successes – but you almost […]

5
Grasping at Competencies
bobemiliani.com

I have previously written several blog posts questioning the conventional wisdom that new college graduates are both technically and socially unprepared for jobs. I’ve also called out employers for not doing the kinds of basic things they should be doing after they hire new college graduates. If one follows the conventional wisdom, the traditional 3-credit course, based […]

4
Read To Succeed
bobemiliani.com

We all know that Lean is mostly learned by doing (which includes observation), but it would be a mistake to think it is not necessary to read books. Why? We read books to help us understand new ideas and practices, evaluate our thinking, and make sure we are headed in the right direction. The most capable […]

5
Frequently Highlighted Passages in “The Mistakes That Make Us”
www.leanblog.org

One exciting feature of the Amazon Kindle format is the ability for readers to see what other readers have frequently highlighted. It’s also fascinating, as the author, to see this. It’s a form of feedback about what seems to resonate with readers. I’ll share some of the “early returns” from the first few weeks, realizing […]

2
How to Optimize Your Manufacturing Work Environment
theleansuite.com

A goal of many manufacturers is to optimize efficiency in the workplace. Fortunately, there a several lean concepts that can help. By applying these tools and principles to your assembly line, production processes, or mindset, this can result in a boost in your productivity levels. Not only can implementing lean ideas help you to reduce […]

5
The MBA: Relevance Lost
bobemiliani.com

Hult International Business School in Boston recently released the results of a survey asking business leaders about the current state of MBA education. Read the summary report here and the full report here. I am skeptical of what business leaders say they want from graduates for reasons cited in previous blog posts. Remarkably, as self-proclaimed […]

7
The Back Story – Lean Leadership
bobemiliani.com

This is the back story to my 20-plus years of Lean leadership research and practice. I became interested in Lean leadership soon after I participated in my first kaizens led by Shingijutsu consultants in the summer of 1994, when I was a business unit manager at Pratt & Whitney. After a few kaizens, I noticed that […]

10
More Learning From Mistakes
bobemiliani.com

A previous blog post, Learning From Mistakes, described a failed Lean leadership training activity at a large and successful technology company. People liked that story so much that I decided to share another mistake, vintage 2003-2005, which also learned a lot from. The vast majority of the Lean leadership training that I have done with […]

2
June 2014 Lean In Higher Ed Conference
bobemiliani.com

I hope you are planing to attend the 2014 Lean Six Sigma Higher Education Conference at HAN University, in Arnhem, The Netherlands, on 2-3 June 2014. For more information, visit the conference home page. In addition to speaking at the conference, I am presenting a paper “One is Good, More is Better: Engaging Faculty in Lean Teaching.” […]

4
Students’ View of Online Courses
bobemiliani.com

I recently took an informal poll of some undergraduate students and asked them what they liked about online courses. Their responses are: Don’t have to leave one’s dorm room Do the work in your pajamas Flexible Convenient No teamwork Work at one’s own pace Don’t have the pressure of answering questions in class Shorter duration […]

2
Know Who You Are Talking To
bobemiliani.com

When you talk to the boss, are you actually talking to the boss or are you talking to a small part of the boss? In  most cases, you are talking to a small part of the boss. That is why many conversations, especially those about Lean, often do not go the way you expect them […]

9
People Solve Problems Episode 2 with Special Guest Mark Graban
www.jflinch.com

        In an engaging episode of the podcast, host Jamie Flinchbaugh welcomes distinguished guest, Mark Graban. The conversation provides invaluable insights into management, problem-solving, and risk mitigation methodologies, drawing from Mark’s wealth of experience and expertise. Mark begins the discussion by emphasizing the importance of failure modes and effects analysis (FMEA), a […]

8
Students At Risk
bobemiliani.com

The people who advocate new models of higher education, principally variants of online and competency-based education, often characterize the benefits to students as many, and the drawbacks as few or none. Almost nothing is all upside and no downside. Most people in need of something new are easily drawn into the marketing hype that presents […]

2
Theories Have Consequences
bobemiliani.com

Business leaders often criticize academics as being “theoretical.” I would like to point out a few examples of business leaders being “theoretical.” Specifically, pie-in-the-sky theories that guide leader’s thinking and decision-making, which no diligent, thoughtful, knowledgeable, and unbiased (fact-based) academic would ever advise leaders to follow. Here are some leaders’ theories related to business: The […]

4
Continuous Flow University
bobemiliani.com

Chapter 11 of my book We Can Do It! describes the concept of Continuous Flow University, in which all administrative and academic processes are converted from batch-and-queue to flow. The reason for doing this is two-fold: First, to eliminate expensive queues that both create and hide problems Second, to balance cycle times to eliminate bottlenecks […]

5
Quality of Lean
bobemiliani.com

Is there pride of ownership among the leaders of organizations who practice Lean? Are they proud if their management practice? Have they done something noteworthy, perhaps even remarkable, that most others others have not? Are leaders’ mistakes and errors few and mostly insignificant. Do people like their leaders? Are they proud of them? Would they […]

6
Labor Unions and Lean
bobemiliani.com

The headlines are alarming: “Lean Production: Inside the Real War on Public Education” and “Lean Production Comes to Public Education (Parents and Teachers Must Fight This Process).” Has Lean really come to public education? No, that has not actually happened, and it will never happen until people – education leaders, union leaders, teachers, and staff […]

9
Human Touch vs. Technology
bobemiliani.com

The role of professor is more than just teaching. It involves guiding students, young and old, through the many small steps needed to complete courses and degree programs. Faculty defend their role in providing the “human touch” to people whose futures depend on what courses they take and what they learned in school. But, sometimes […]

9
Resequencing Leading with Outcomes, what’s next, and how you can help
blog.agendashift.com

[Discuss on LinkedIn] Following the success of June’s first 3-day Leading in a Transforming Organisation, I’m initiating a resequencing of the Leading with Outcomes curriculum. It will take a while to implement in full (in particular, re-recording video-based content takes time, and I won’t be doing that for this reason alone), but consider this now […]

10
Lots of Good Ideas, Except One
bobemiliani.com

When organizations run into financial problems, educated, experienced, and highly paid leaders immediately proceed to do things that someone with no education, no experience, and paid minimum wage can do: lay people off. This is true for public non-profit universities as well as private for-profit industry. Invariably, the cuts maximally impact those who desire the […]

3
Ignore Change Management
bobemiliani.com

One of the things that impresses me about Lean done right is that there is no need for a “change management” program. Change management programs are a structured process whose intent is to achieve lasting organizational change. But they almost never do because it is complex, confusing, and transparently self-serving. While intentions are good, outcomes […]

8
Live Event on Thursday — Mark Graban and Katie Anderson Book Chat
www.leanblog.org

I hope you’ll join me and Katie tomorrow at 2 pm ET… Mark and Katie will discuss his new book, The Mistakes That Make Us: Cultivating a Culture of Learning and Innovation, as he marks a milestone with a Daruma doll that Katie gave him before he started writing. We will also discuss the third […]

7
Transparency and Technology
bobemiliani.com

A recent article in The Economist, “Is College Worth It?,” takes the usual narrow view of the value of higher education as a return on investment – graduates’ earnings minus the cost of college – at various institutions for different types of degrees (humanities, engineering, science, etc). Making this this type of information available to students […]

9
Boss, Know Your CI People
bobemiliani.com

Most top executives do little more than voice support for Lean. It is an example of talking big, yet doing mostly small things. If that is the reality in most organizations, then maybe senior managers can do one more small thing that could help Lean move forward faster: Get to know your internal continuous improvement […]

7
Author Interview with George Saiz: We Started With Respect
kbjanderson.com

How do you create a culture of respect? What does a culture of authentic leadership look like in real life? Where do you start with organizational transformation? I’m happy to host George Saiz as the next guest in my author interview series, and to talk about his new book We Started with Respect, which was […]

5
Peak Lean
bobemiliani.com

Has interest in Lean peaked? If so, how do we know? The answer, of course, comes from Google. The image below is from Google Trends. It shows the level of interest in Lean as determined by global keyword searches on the web from 2004 to April 2014, including a 12-month forecast into April 2015. You can […]

2