"Nothing is particularly hard if you divide it into small jobs." — Henry Ford
Continuous
improvement is about small changes on a daily basis to make your job
easier. Small step-by-step improvements
are more effective over time than occasional kaizen bursts, and have a
significantly greater impact on the organization culture - creating an
environment of involvement and improvement.
Small
victories tap into motivation. Achievement is fueled by making small amounts of
progress, such as accomplishing a task or solving a problem. Help employees
break projects, goals, and work assignments into small victories. Help them
jump into an achievement cycle.
Making
one small change is both rewarding to the person making the change and if
communicated to others can lead to a widespread adoption of the improvement and
the possibility that someone will improve on what has already been improved.
There's no telling what might occur if this were the everyday habit of all team
members.
One
of the most counter intuitive facts about small ideas is that they can actually
provide a business with more sustainable competitive advantages than big ideas.
The bigger the ideas, the more likely competitors will copy or counter them. If
new ideas affect the company's products or services, they're directly visible
and often widely advertised. And even if
they involve behind-the-scenes improvements--say, to a major system or
process--they're often copied just as quickly. That's because big, internal
initiatives typically require outside sources, such as suppliers, contractors,
and consultants, who sell their products and services to other companies,
too. Small ideas, on the other hand, are
much less likely to migrate to competitors--and even if they do, they're often
too specific to be useful. Because most
small ideas remain proprietary, large numbers of them can accumulate into a
big, competitive advantage that is sustainable. That edge often means the
difference between success and failure.
In
a Lean enterprise a strategy of making small, incremental improvements every
day, rather than trying to find a monumental improvement once or twice a year
equates to a colossal competitive advantage over time and competitors cannot
copy these compounded small improvements.
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