Who in your
plant knows the most about the problems that occur: the slow-downs,
minor-stoppages, equipment failures, the waste, the inefficiencies, the source
of poor quality, the frustrations due to maintenance work not being executed
correctly, and so on? Is it you? Is it senior leadership? Is it anyone in
management or engineering?
Have you ever
heard of “The Iceberg of Ignorance”? Japanese consultant Sidney Yoshida coined
the term in a study that he presented at the International Quality Symposium in
Mexico City in 1989. It was a popular concept in its day and led to the
popularization of suggestion boxes and quality circles, among other things.
According to
Yoshida, 100% of an organization’s front-line problems are known by front-line
employees. This totally makes sense, right?
However,
Yoshida found that when he went up one level in management, to the front-line
employees’ supervisors, those supervisors only knew 74% of the front-line
problems. After all, people “manage up.” They want to look good in front of
their boss. Plus, some supervisors “don’t want to hear it.” And people are
busy. They may not have time to tell their supervisors about every problem,
large and small. So ... only 74% of the front-line problems are known by
front-line supervisors.
Naturally, the
pattern continues as you move up within the organization. By the time you get
to middle management, according to Yoshida, those managers are aware of only 9%
of an organization’s front-line problems.
And top
management? They’re only aware of 4% — just the tip of the iceberg!
In short: The
higher up someone is in an organization, the less likely that person is to have
all the information about front-line problems.
So, what can we
be doing to melt the berg in our organization? The words of Toyota Chairman
Fujio Cho, “Go see, ask why, show respect” are the way we make it happen.
1.
“Go
see” involves (1) viewing the Gemba in order to assess the alignment of the
Gemba’s purpose with that of the organization, (2) observing processes to
understand whether or not they are designed to support the purpose, and (3) to
engage the people to gain their perspectives on whether or not the processes
are designed to help them fulfill their roles in achieving the purpose.
2.
“Ask
why” can be done from four perspectives, the solution view (which looks for
opportunities to employ solutions), the waste view (which tries to identify
areas of waste or inefficiency), the problem view (which starts with
objectives, confirms design, and asks why the objectives can’t be met), and the
Kaizen view (which seeks to examine for improvement at a system level).
3.
“Show
respect” is perhaps the most valuable piece, as people are the goal, not simply
the means to an end. Objectives are accomplished by people, not processes.
Processes ought to be designed to support people in their accomplishment of
objectives. Ultimately this means developing people to be who they can be. One
tremendous side effect of that development is greatly increased capability in
fulfilling their roles, which leads to greater efficiency in accomplishing
objectives.
This
isn’t anything new. It is at the heart of TPS and basic lean principles.
Performing root cause analysis, making suggestions, and executing the solution
is fundamental to how humans work. You need to show some trust and let nature
take its course.
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