Sinopsis
Mark Graban reads and expands upon selected posts from LeanBlog.org. Topics include Lean principles and leadership in healthcare, manufacturing, business, and the world around us.Learn more at http://www.leanblog.org/audio Become a supporter of this podcast:https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
Episodios
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Are Millennials the Only Ones Who Need to Understand Why?
16/09/2015 Duración: 04minAnd the idea of knowing why... again that's an old desire. It's not just a recent discovery of Simon Sinek and the outstanding book Start with Why (my friends at Gemba Academy have a podcast interview with him coming soon). Why are we doing something? Why are we starting this company? That's an old tale... are you breaking rocks or building a cathedral? --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Stuff I'm Reading Sept 2015: Urgency, Problems, and Lemmings
09/09/2015 Duración: 06minVisit http://www.leanblog.org/audio92 for more info on this post and http://www.leanblog.org/audio for information about how to subscribe through iTunes and other places. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Football, Holistic Systems, and Challenging the
03/09/2015 Duración: 08minToday, I discuss two articles: The first article is: "The NFL's Best Practice: No Wasted Time." "If You Can't Hire Urban Meyer, Can You Clone Him?" http://leanblog.org/audio91 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Another Conversation About L.A.M.E. and Lean
31/08/2015 Duración: 10minhttp://leanblog.org/audio90 It's far too common to see somebody with just a little bit of understanding about Lean do things that really shouldn't be described as Lean at all... in terms of the decisions they are making or the approaches they are taking.I saw an article about Lean in physician practices: "Lean Practice Management for Physicians." I cringed a bit when the author said: "In lean management programs, there are levels of belts based upon the colors found in karate: white, yellow, green, black, and levels of black." No. That's an example of "Lean As Mistakenly Explained." --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Inc. Writes About Dr. Deming in 1987
27/08/2015 Duración: 06minI stumbled across an article from the Inc. magazine archives from 1987, so it's today's "Throwback Thursday."In 1987, I was starting high school and that was probably right about the time when my dad, an engineer for General Motors, was able to attend one of Deming's famed four-day seminars. Hearing about that was my first exposure to Deming or anything vaguely related to Lean thinking. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Updating "Lean Hospitals" and a New eBook, "Practicing Lean"
24/08/2015 Duración: 06minMark Graban talks about the revised 3rd edition of "Lean Hospitals" and a new eBook project called "Practicing Lean." --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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So-Called "Just in Time" Retail Staff Scheduling is not #Lean
22/08/2015 Duración: 06minStories like this have been in the news before, but this was circulating the past few days: "Why erratic schedules are one of the worst parts of low-wage work."The story refers to so-called "just-in-time" scheduling techniques that jerk employees around and disrupt lives. It happens to share a term, "JIT" with "Lean manufacturing" or just "Lean," but it's either a coincidence or it's a bastardization of what Lean is really about. And I can prove it quite easily. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Using Lean to Organize Hospital Closets...
14/08/2015 Duración: 10minhttp://leanblog.org/audio86 I saw this story when it originally appeared online as part of a local public radio station in California. It was now picked up nationally by NPR and a number of you emailed me about this Lean healthcare piece about UCLA Medical Center:Hospitals Turn To Toyota To Make Care Safer And Swifter It's a generally positive story about a large hospital system working to improve... and turning to Toyota (directly to Toyota) for help. To be fair, they did far more than organize closets... but that was the main photo and lead story that started the piece. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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A Hospital Manager Makes Time for Kaizen
13/08/2015 Duración: 05minHow do you MAKE time for continuous improvement?It's been a little while, but here's a new video about Kaizen and continuous improvement from our friends at Franciscan St. Francis Health in Indianapolis. In this video, Hollynn Lobsiger, the manager of the endoscopy unit, talks about what Kaizen means to her and her team and she also shares some thoughts about how to make time for Kaizen. Everybody (or nearly everybody) complains about not having enough time for improvement - that includes time for staff and time for managers. The challenge is how to go from "lack of time" being an excuse to being a problem that you solve (see my video about this). Hollynn and her team are a great example of being proactive to make time for improvement (as you can see in this video with staff describing an improvement). See how Hollynn sets a tone for them and expects input from everybody? They're "Kaizen Crazy!" :-) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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When Warnings Aren't Given or Heeded,
12/08/2015 Duración: 13minThe Problem With Underreporting Problems, When Warnings Aren’t Heeded in Aerospace, When Warnings Aren’t Heeded in Aerospace, When Warnings or Concerns Aren’t Shared in Healthcare http://leanblog.org/audio84 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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"Practice? We're Talking About Practice?" Yes, Practicing Lean
08/08/2015 Duración: 08minAllen Iverson was a legendary NBA point guard and scorer who played from 1996 to 2011.In a 2002 news conference that still appears regularly on ESPN, Iverson responded to criticism that he missed practice (due to injury) and he somewhat indignantly asked (over and over) some variation of: "We're talking about practice?" Iverson wasn't complaining about having to practice, but more about the media's insistence on asking questions about practice, which is a topic he apparently didn't think was too interesting to talk about. Practice is certainly important. Maybe not when you're already as good as Iverson was. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Let's Play Match Game '15 - Suggestion Box Edition
07/08/2015 Duración: 06minI guess this counts as a "Flashback Friday," as I was reminded of an old game show that I loved as a kid: Match Game. I was too young to fully appreciate the show, I guess, but I remember it fondly and love watching old reruns (you can find episodes on YouTube).Last week, I read this article: "A happy workforce is a productive one." You'll certainly get no argument from me on that! Well, I think "engagement" is more important than happiness, as happiness might possibly be superficial. But I've long said that an engaged workforce is the key to success in an organization. I thought the article got off track when the author brought up suggestion boxes. Oh no. Suggestion boxes never work. So I took a line from the article and posed it as a Match Game type question on Twitter: --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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How My Blog Rant Helped Keep an Office 5S
06/08/2015 Duración: 05minhttp://leanblog.org/audio81 Lean is not about banning bananas from people's desks or banning sweaters hanging on chairs.We should be solving problems that matter, for customers and employees, through Lean. We should be engaging people rather than throwing silly top-down mandates at them. I tend to get on a soapbox and rant about the "bad office 5S" examples... but I got an email this week that made me smile, because it helped an organization avoid the L.A.M.E. office 5S trap. The email, shared with permission: --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Moving from "Visuals" to "Visual Management"
04/08/2015 Duración: 09minhttp://leanblog.org/audio80 Here's the Key to Visual Management:To me, the core of visual management is captured in this statement from Fujio Cho, now the honorary chairman of Toyota: "Know normal from abnormal... right now!" If the "visual" isn't helping accomplish that goal, it's probably not visual management. Visual management has two parts - the visual(something you see) and the management (the action you take based on the visual). Why do we have to manage the visual abnormality? To get better results. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Why This Sushi Company Policy Letter
03/08/2015 Duración: 06minhttp://leanblog.org/audio79 I love the Texas-based grocery store chain "Central Market." It's like a local version of a Whole Foods, basically.One of their features is a sushi area that's run by a third-party company, Yummi Sushi. Posted prominently is a letter that outlines their stated approach to quality and safety. Click the photo for a larger view. Below, I'm going to basically transcribe the letter, but as if it were the policy of a hospital or health system. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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How These Credit Card Websites Illustrate Lean Mistake Proofing
01/08/2015 Duración: 08minHere is my latest article for the LinkedIn“Influencers” series, written for a general audience that might not be as familiar with Lean: How These Credit Card Websites Illustrate Lean Mistake Proofing I hope you enjoy the article, even as a Lean thinker. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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A Lean Guy Listens to NPR: NICU Waste,
31/07/2015 Duración: 07minhttp://leanblog.org/audio77 I did a similar post in 2012, but here's a post where I share some recent NPR stories that I've heard recently (through the NPR One app, which I absolutely love).This is similar to my "A Lean Guy Reads..." series, my "Cleaning Out the Backlog" series, and the "Stuff I'm Reading" posts. Not All NICU Babies Should Get the Same Treatments Shrinking and Cutting Isn't the Only Path for Hospitals More Expensive Cancer Drugs Aren't Always Better Getting Patients Involved in Choosing Better Care --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Key Points About Kaizen from Japanese Hospitals,
30/07/2015 Duración: 07minhttp://leanblog.org/audio76 The Kaizen approach to continuous improvement is important to me, of course. The Japanese hospitals we've visited have a strong tradition of practicing Total Quality Management. Some are now embracing Kaizen as "daily continuous improvement" in addition to their six month long TQM projects.We're again organizing a Lean Healthcare Study Trip to Japan, which will take place September 13 to 19 in Nagoya and Tokyo. Learn more via http://www.japanleantrip.com. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Model Lines and Model Cells as a Lean Transformation Strategy
28/07/2015 Duración: 10minThere's another approach that goes underappreciated, I think -- the "model line" or "model cell" approach. It has nothing to do with fashion models. I don't like the term "cell" because it might make people think of a prison or a gulag. Then again, the word "line" might make people think of "assembly line medicine" in a negative way. Maybe "model area" is a better term? I'll think about that as I work on the updated 3rd edition of my book Lean Hospitals. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
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Parody: Keith Olber-Lean and the
27/07/2015 Duración: 08minhttp://leanblog.org/audio74 In this post, I'll be presenting a parody video of Keith Olbermann's "worst persons in the sports world" videos.I don't know how much overlap there is in people who read my blog and people who are fans of Olbermann. I've always been a big fan of Olbermann the sports guy... Olbermann the political commentator not so much. But, "the worst persons in the world" is a bit that he's done on MSNBC and ESPN. In this video, I'm playing a character... a parody you might call Keith Olber-Lean. I'll be taking some shots at people... naming names as the tongue-in-cheek "worst persons in the Lean world." This video might seem mean spirited. I'm not normally this mean spirited on my blog, although I've made comments about these issues and people before (worse, worser, and worst). Olbermann often seems mean spirited. But, he's entertaining and usually makes a serious point through humor. I'll try to do the same here. The serious points I'm making are: Lean leaders and consultants should be h