Larry Culp, CEO
of GE, their first outside CEO in 125 years has been leading their
transformation using a Lean mindset. Many Lean practitioners and business
leaders have been following GE’s performance. Recently Larry released the
annual report and I really appreciate the lessons I found within. You can read
the full report here.
1.
Grounded
in purpose, values, and responsibilities.
GE’s purpose of
building a better world beholden to shareholders, customers, and society.
This
document always has been about more than our financial performance, though.
It’s told the continuous story of GE’s culture and how our values are embedded
in the purpose of building a better world. We remain acutely aware of
and humbled by our responsibility to shareholders, customers, and society.
And we recognize that our team still, and always, strives for results.
2.
Tackle
challenges head on with clear goals.
Companies are
in business to make a profit, so this is not a surprise but goal two is really
about how they expect to accomplish goal one. Lean will ensure their efforts
are both sustainable and culture changing.
We embraced
reality head on, taking disciplined and deliberate steps to tackle our challenges
while investing to protect what made GE special. We set two clear goals: One, improve
our financial position to deal with our debt load. Two, improve our
operations to strengthen our businesses. Lean, with its relentless
focus on the customer and pursuit of continuous improvement, makes our efforts sustainable
and is leading to lasting culture change.
3.
Embracing
a Lean philosophy rooted in kaizen.
We’ve been
taught there is always an opportunity for improvement and embracing the spirit
kaizen will propel your business forward.
Belief in
a better way has
propelled this company forward since our earliest days. Today, in an
ever-challenging environment, GE employees are embracing a lean
philosophy rooted in kaizen, “change to make it better.” They are
delivering for our customers by listening, learning, and executing.
Step-by-step, one process at a time, they are advancing safety, quality,
delivery, and cost, in that order, serving our customers and each other with
deep respect.
4.
Empowering
people leads to results.
When you
combine compelling purpose with problem solving people within lean systems in
my experience you’ll find increasingly better performance.
The merging
of great people with great purpose. The connecting of plans and performance.
5.
Kaizen
is the magic that frankly becomes addicting as the improvements build on
themselves and grow.
Like the
example below my experience is the same. Improvement begets improvement. It is
infectious.
Enter
lean… through
a kaizen event
at our Lynn, Massachusetts, plant… Our
goal: Take that 75 hours down to under 32, with one mechanic working at a time.
By the end
of the week, engineers and operators working together on the floor identified
opportunities both big and small; saving hours of prep time by using a heat gun
instead of an oven to treat a compressor rotor, for example. The result was
reducing build time to just 11 hours with one operator, all the while enhancing
safety and quality.
75 to 11 is
the kind of change that takes your breath away. But to me, the best part was
the fact that on Thursday of that week, the team was already talking about how
they were going to do better than 11; what they could do next.
That is
the spirit of lean and kaizen. Always getting better. Your mindset shifts to look for
opportunities at the most granular levels, day in and day out, to enhance
performance and eliminate waste.
These steps,
scaled and compounded across our teams, help customers and support our own
businesses. This “power of the ‘and’”, as Jim Collins would say, is the
magic that frankly becomes addicting as the improvements build on themselves
and grow.
6.
People
are our passion.
Respect for
people is a key pillar of the Toyota Production System intentionally as they
solve problems. They are the solutions. They create opportunities. They are the
lifeblood of the company.
With
unmatched passion and talent, the people of GE remain at the heart of our
efforts, including reinventing ourselves. Challenges can become opportunities
when humility joins with optimism, leading us to believe that a better way is
possible.
7.
Challenge
just good enough culture.
Status quo must
be challenged. The just good enough culture must be challenged.
Our goal has
never been good enough, or a company that’s just better off. It is to build a
world that works better. Period.
8.
Leadership,
humility and gratitude.
Embrace every
opportunity. As a leader your making a mark on the lives of others and the
community you serve.
I’m grateful
for the opportunity of a lifetime to work each day alongside this team.
9.
Larry
Culp’s Photo (see above)
Many CEO’s
would have a professional board room headshot but Larry has a photo from the
Gemba. He’s on the shop floor perhaps in a kaizen but at least seeing where the
value is created. More CEOs need to do this and set the example for their
leadership teams.
It’s great to
see both examples of Lean and leadership in the workplace and no less together.
What do you think? Are there companies that can learn from Larry Culp and GE’s new
approach with Lean? I can think of few in the news recently.