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Wednesday, February 5, 2025

If Your Kaizen is Failing to Deliver Results, Consider These Questions

While Kaizen and continuous improvement approaches have proven to be highly effective in enhancing productivity and fostering a culture of innovation, some companies may struggle to adopt these practices due to several reasons. If your failing to create a kaizen culture here are some questions that you can ask to help diagnose the problem so that Kaizen will create the impact you are looking for.

1.     Who are we asking to participate in kaizens?

Correct answer: “Everybody all the time!”

The more people you engage in Kaizen, the greater your impact will be. It’s simple, really - one person improving one thing each week has an impact of, well, one improvement per week. 500 people each improving one thing per week has a comparably huge impact. Sure, you can’t just straight from one person to 500 people, but definitely make sure you’re aligning your efforts to move in that direction. Kaizen is a competitive strategy in which all employees work together to create a strong culture of constant improvement. Employee engagement matters a great deal in Kaizen.

2.     How often does leadership talk about Kaizen?

Correct answer: “Every chance they get.”

Kaizen involves everyone in continuous improvement to find a better way of doing things. Top management has the most important role in implementing kaizen and that is commitment. When management demonstrates a long-term commitment to continuous improvement employees personally develop a kaizen mindset. Managers and executives should be encouraged to find ways to improve their processes as well.

Leadership that really buys into Kaizen and works to promote a culture of continuous improvement talks about Kaizen every chance they get. When they’re meeting with their staff and someone has a complaint, they suggest capturing that opportunity for improvement. Great Kaizen leaders drive the cultural transformation by emphasizing the value of Kaizen to the organization. They get more engagement, more improvements, and a greater impact.

3.     How do you capture opportunities for improvement?

Wrong answer: ““A suggestion box.”

Many organizations want to harness the ideas for improvement that naturally exist in their employees. Suggestion boxes are a common, but ineffective, way to engage employees in continuous improvement. They’re usually implemented with the best of intentions by managers who genuinely want to hear their employees’ improvement ideas, but the boxes fail to produce the desired engagement. Most of the reasons suggestion boxes, or any idea collection process, do not work effectively come down to a combination of process, culture and communication related issues.

Suggestion boxes are a bad way to approach a great concept, and the desire to engage employees in continuous improvement shouldn’t be abandoned because that method failed. Instead, I’d encourage you to look into real employee engagement.

4.     How long is the turnaround time between when an idea is submitted and when a manager approves it?”

Correct answer: “Same day, when possible.”

If there’s too great of a time lag between when employees capture opportunities for improvement and when their managers give them the “go ahead” to work on them, momentum will be lost and less improvement will be made. Failure to follow through on these can undermine the team's efforts.  It is also necessary to ensure the improvements that are made are maintained to prevent backsliding.

5.     What kind of improvement ideas are looking for?

Correct answer: “Small. Low-cost. Low-risk. Daily. Continuous.”

If you’re asking people to give you big, high impact ideas and devaluing daily continuous improvement, you’re taking the wrong approach to a Kaizen culture. The size or amount you will tackle within the kaizen is important for getting things done.  If the scope is too large you run the problem of never implementing an improvement. Kaizen is all about daily continuous improvements… asking for these will result in capturing and implementing more ideas, with a much bigger overall impact than limiting the query to groundbreaking ideas.

6.     Are you sharing the improvements you’re making?

Correct answer: “Absolutely!”

As long as you’re sharing improvements in some way, you’re on the right track. That is, assuming that your sharing method does the following -

-  Share every improvement with the right people

-  Not take up very much of your precious time

-  Not overwhelm people with too much information

-  Keep all improvements accessible to anyone who is interested

-  Connect all employees around improvement

Sharing improvements is important because it allows the impact of each to spread beyond its initial scope, gets more people engaged in continuous improvement, recognizes employees who are doing great work, and promotes knowledge sharing.

7.     What rewards and recognition do you offer?

Correct answer: “Recognition in meetings and sharing success.”

Offering financial rewards for Kaizen is a common pitfall. Giving any type of financial reward actually results in a decreased number of improvements captured and implemented because:

-  The reward structure only promotes improvements with a financial return.

-  People want credit for their ideas so that they get the money, so they don’t collaborate.

-  The focus becomes on getting money, not on improving the organization

-  Improvements in areas like safety, quality, and satisfaction are undervalued

Kaizen is about the behavior of finding and solving problems, not the result or outcome of doing so. Therefore, you should reward and recognize the behavior, not the result or outcome, of the Kaizen. This way, you can reinforce the desired behaviors and process that drive continuous improvement and encourage your team members to keep looking for opportunities to improve, such as asking questions, generating ideas, testing solutions, and evaluating results.

Successful kaizen efforts can result in benefits such as increased productivity, improved quality, better safety, lower costs, and improved customer satisfaction. Kaizen can also lead to benefits in a company’s culture, including improved communication among employees, improved morale and employee satisfaction, and an increased sense of ownership in the company among employees.


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