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The Lean Post / Articles / HR Strategies for Successful and Sustainable Lean Transformations

HR Strategies for Successful and Sustainable Lean Transformations

Administration & Support

HR Strategies for Successful and Sustainable Lean Transformations

By Cheryl Jekiel

March 21, 2018

The interest in strengthening employee engagement is sometimes considered a separate topic from lean transformations. Cheryl Jekiel, who has over 25 years of experience in HR and lean implementations, offers practical tips on how to create engagement with lean activities.

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Can you give an example of one engagement practice that encourages employee involvement with lean management?

One engagement practice is involving employees in understanding the bigger picture and their role in creating organizational success. Similarly, lean efforts include the same type of activity often referred to as “strategic deployment.” Fundamentally, strategic deployment refers to taking the highest-level goals and cascading them through the teams so that each individual understands their link to the larger vision. These practices are well-known to have a significant impact on organizational accomplishments, as well as adding to an individual’s satisfaction with their work.

Consider that senior management establishes key goals for the year and that all employees could understand their roles in ways that ensure that their efforts are in alignment. For example, one of the primary goals could be to improve product quality metrics by 5% by year-end. Various employee groups or teams would have an appropriately aligned goal that would allow an individual’s role to contribute to the desired improvement. Appropriate metrics would be visually displayed along with regular updates. In this way, everyone is actively involved in achieving the larger goal.

Anyone can write “Make employees feel more valued” in their True North statement. But that’s not even close to engagement. What does this look like in practice as an ENGAGEMENT strategy?

One way to best understand how lean activities create engagement is in looking at ways that employees feel undervalued. Whenever individuals feel their roles and work do not fully utilize their skills and abilities, they feel less valued. In a lean enterprise, people find themselves contributing to solving problems or participating in interdepartmental teams. With an increased sense of contributing beyond their individual roles, employees experience that they have a greater impact and naturally feel more valued. Individuals also internalize the benefits and consequently, their quality of life is positively impacted as well.

I have a unique viewpoint of this topic having over 25 years of experience in HR that included engagement efforts, and at least the same amount of time with lean implementations. I think that’s why it became obvious to me that these areas of work have much in common and are typically not leveraged together. 

What are other lean practices that tie to engagement? 

Lean practices such as idea generation boards, gemba walks, and team process mapping, all create opportunities for engagement. Both of these areas of work have found that a critical piece of the puzzle also lies in the way leaders inspire their teams. Instead of using the method of command and control, employee engagement and lean leadership models focus on the ability to coach, build confidence, and empower team members to new levels of achievement and capability. 

The greatest barrier to engagement is poor leadership. Conversely, the greatest asset for engagement is through a positive and inspiring leadership model.

 How can they be used together?

 Often, engagement work is handled through an HR department using a survey process with follow-up activities. Unfortunately, many of these efforts can fail to achieve measurable success due to a struggle to focus attention adequately or bringing little to no change in behavior. Departments commonly grapple to use engagement activities in a sufficiently comprehensive way so that employees experience significant adjustments in their work.

On the other hand, lean is often overseen initially by Operations and is often linked to effective action planning and organized activities specific to them. Successful engagement increases when consideration is given to aligning the information from engagement survey results or comments with optimizing aspects of the lean strategies.

In many instances, the change in lean strategies involves more attention to the leadership skills that lead to empowering employees and increased involvement. Thus, helping make sure the benefits of lean engagement are being spread out to a greater number of employees.

Where would you advise somebody to start using this strategy? Any specific place/setting/activity that you recommend?

If an organization has not begun to understand the level of engagement of their workforce, I would suggest they begin with a survey process. However, I suggest they do not start until they have a full plan for addressing the results. If they are already measuring engagement, I recommend they combine the engagement strategies with the lean strategies to see where they overlap as potential leverage points. Meaning, that the action plans for one would be in alignment with the action plans for the other. Combining resources and focus would improve the results.

What are you most looking forward to sharing at the 2018 Lean Transformation Summit?

I’m looking forward to sharing the research that demonstrates higher levels of engagement are linked to stronger financial performance in most key performance areas, such as profitability, shareholder value, productivity, quality, safety, retention, attendance, and many others. The research creates a foundation to understand why optimizing lean and engagement efforts clearly presents a financial benefit for lean that most individuals and organizations are not aware of.

 

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Written by:

Cheryl Jekiel

About Cheryl Jekiel

Cheryl M. Jekiel oversees the Lean Leadership Resource Center, which provides access to a range of materials for lean enterprises, including special components for lean cultures, general lean leadership development, and Human Resource leaders.

Cheryl has over 25 years of manufacturing experience, most recently as vice president of human resources positions for Tri-Arrows Aluminum Inc., FONA International, Inc. and Flying Food Group, LLC. She served for five years as COO after holding a number of other leadership roles at a specialty bakery in the Chicagoland area.  Cheryl has developed an expertise in lean manufacturing with a particular focus on lean cultures. She has made countless significant improvements in reducing operating costs and leveraging a lean culture to obtain stronger and sustainable results.

Cheryl brings a tremendous passion for continuous improvement in her commitment to building Lean HR as a recognized field of work. She is the author of Lean Human Resources: Redesigning HR Processes for a Lean Culture.

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