Simply,
sustainability is about lasting change. Sustainability is discussed often and
one of the great issues in management.
We have all seen facts related to the low rates of sustaining change or
seen news about a company who lost its way. Unfortunately, we see all too often those
companies who finally reach #1 to only lose their way.
Complacency
can and will compromise the performance of your organization. Everyone can
become complacent in their particular environment, and there are different
levels of complacency. At higher management positions, complacency may be more
latent. At the line personnel “trigger pullers” level, however, complacency can
have catastrophic results.
When
it comes to complacency with regard to Lean it is often the result of a “We are
Lean” mindset. This leads to a reduction in awareness/focus and leads to a
false sense of security. For Lean to work effectively, the organization must be
constantly focused on continuous improvement and best practice procedures for
providing value. What sets an effective Lean system apart from simply reducing
waste is ingraining continuous improvement thinking into daily practice. Lean
is not about a destination but rather journey.
Charles
Darwin said "It is not the strongest species that survive, nor the most
intelligent, but the ones who are most responsive to change" which holds
true for culture change.
Below
are ten factors that will help any organization make the change they make
lasting.
Capability – Management must
employ the time and resources necessary for change.
Intention – Determination and
drive for the cause is required. You
must insist we make the change and be determined to keep it up.
Success – People feel
happier and perform better when there is a feeling of success and vice
versa. Attitude drives performance so
managers must project confidence.
Hard Work – It is hard to keep
it going. This is entropy. Without it, the system runs down.
Emphasis on the team
not the individual
– In the US we love heroes, but actually teams are more fundamental for
long-term survival. Teams need to be
mentored and developed.
Many small wins, rather
than the occasional big win – Small wins keep up the enthusiasm, and certainly add
up. Management needs to continually
recognize small wins.
Attitude toward
failure
– Everyone fails from time to time, but what is crucial is the attitude toward
failure: do you punish or do you treat it as part of learning?
Motivation – Sustainability
requires interest and involvement of all employees. Ask "What gets rewarded around
here? Build a culture to support
improvement.
Discipline – Make it a
habit. Without good disciple the system
will not be maintained. Management must
teach discipline and correct lapses with respect for people as they occur.
Performance measures – It is true you get
what you measure, drive good behavior.
Performance measures need to be aligned with what you want to
achieve. Think long term.
There
is no such thing as self-sustainability, it requires ongoing effort. Sustainable
behavior change is not something that occurs as a result of doing a 30 or
90-day program, nor is it something that you master after doing it for a year.
Change takes a daily commitment to put in the time and energy, knowing that the
return on that investment is great.
Lean
(excellence) is a journey that never ends. There will always be a gap between
where you are (current state) and where you would like to be (True North).
Since there will always be a gap, there will always be an opportunity to
improve. Walking the path on a Lean journey can be an overwhelming experience.
Lean
grew out of years of practice and experimentation at Toyota. No matter how much
better they are than their competition, they continue to find more and more
opportunities to improve each and every year. Lean involves the creation and
implementation of continuous experiments to improve your strategies over time.
This means experimenting with every process every day to get it right. We learn
problem solving through hands-on improvement experiments. In Toyota and in lean
thinking, the idea is to repeat cycles of improvement experiments forever.
A
Lean journey is full of steps not all of which are forward. Failure will occur.
Its ok, the purpose is learning, and we learn through experimentation. Trying
new approaches, exploring new methods and testing new ideas for improving the
various processes is exercise for the mind.
So
leaders must create a culture that puts failure in its proper place: a useful
tool for learning, and a natural part of iterative experimentation. Management
must avoid the temptation to harshly judge unsuccessful ideas. A leader who
allows for experimentation sends a clear signal that personnel are encouraged
to find better methods and products.
Organizations
embarking on a Lean journey should follow a disciplined process of systematic
exploration and controlled experimentation. Kaizen is the process which
determines whether processes resulted in improvements. It refers to an on-going
activity by all people (including managers) to relentlessly and incrementally
change and improve practices in small experiments.
The
road to continual improvement is a rocky one with many ups and downs. Value the
incremental improvement approach to continuous improvement. Through simple,
common-sense, and low cost experimentation a great deal of process improvements
can be made. Experimentation is the exercise of a healthy Lean journey.
Understanding this allows one the opportunity to stay on the path along the
journey.
I am curious to know your thoughts on sustainability metrics. After a transformation has occurred and the teams are not running under the improved system, do you feel it is critical to measure whether or not the new processes are being sustained or do you focus solely on the productivity metrics to be the control indicator? Any thoughts on this would be great!
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