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The Lean Post / Articles / Long-term Organizational Health or Sugar High?

Long-term Organizational Health or Sugar High?

Coaching

Long-term Organizational Health or Sugar High?

By Robert Miller

April 30, 2014

"We know 'flavor-of-the-month' initiatives can't be the focus of a lean leader," writes Bob Miller of the Shingo Institute. So where should lean leaders focus their attention? Miller shares three insights from 26 years of Shingo research.

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Enlightened lean practitioners have come to understand that sustainability of a lean journey is only possible when it becomes part of the organizational culture. Otherwise, improvement efforts seem to consistently result in a series of “sugar highs” – temporary boosts in results accompanied by a fleeting feeling of victory. We know “flavor-of-the-month” initiatives can’t be the focus of a lean leader. So, where should their focus be?

Based on 26 years of experience assessing organizations that have challenged for the Shingo Prize and eight years of research around the Shingo Model™, we at the Shingo Institute have developed three key insights into building this culture. We call these insights the “Three Insights of Enterprise Excellence.”

Insight #1

Ideal Results Require Ideal Behaviors

Results are the aim of every organization, but there are various methods by which results are attained. Ideal results are those that are sustainable over the long-term. Simply learning or buying new tools or systems does not achieve ideal results. Great leaders understand the cause-and-effect relationship between results and behavior. To achieve ideal results, leaders must do the hard work of creating an environment where ideal behaviors are evident in every associate.

Insight #2

Beliefs and Systems Drive Behavior

It has long been understood that our beliefs have a profound effect on our behavior. What is often overlooked, however, is the equally profound effect that systems have on behavior. Most of the systems that guide the way people work in our companies were designed to create a specific business result without regard for the behavior that the system consequentially drives. Many systems are de facto systems that have evolved in response to a specific need for a particular result. Managers have an enormous job to realign both management and work systems to drive the ideal behavior required to achieve ideal business results.

Insight #3

Principles Inform Ideal Behaviors

Principles are foundational rules and help us to see both the positive and negative consequence of our behaviors. This fact enables us to make more informed decisions, specifically, about how we choose to behave. The more deeply leaders, managers, and associates understand the principles of operational excellence and the more perfectly systems are aligned to reinforce ideal behaviors, the greater the probability of creating a sustainable culture of excellence where achieving ideal results is the norm rather than the aspiration. This is what the Shingo Model™ illustrates.

With these three insights in mind, our theme for the 26th International Shingo Conference this May 5-9 is “A New Era of Enterprise Excellence.” As we say goodbye to the sugar high and embrace a new era where culture is founded on principles and systems drive ideal behaviors, we will achieve the results we are looking for.

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Written by:

Robert Miller

About Robert Miller

Robert Miller is executive director of The Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence, which is administered by the Jon M. Huntsman School of Business at Utah State University. Miller guides development of products and services for executive education that are based on universal principles of operational excellence.

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