Lean Enterprise Institute Logo
  • Contact Us
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Cart (78)
  • Account
  • Search
Lean Enterprise Institute Logo
  • Explore Lean
        • What is Lean?
        • The Lean Transformation Framework
        • A Brief History of Lean
        • Lexicon Terms
        • Topics to explore
          • Operations
          • Lean Product & Process Development
          • Administration & Support
          • Problem-Solving
          • Coaching
          • Executive Leadership
          • Line Management
  • The Lean Post
        • Subscribe to see exclusive content
          • Subscribe
        • Featured posts
          What I’ve Learned About Planning and Execution

          Lean Product and Process Development at Scale:...

          craftsmanship

          Pursuing Perfection: Craftsmanship in Product Development

          • See all Posts
  • Events & Courses
        • Forms and Templates
        • Featured learning
          • The Future of People at Work Symposium 

            July 18, 2024 | Detroit, Michigan

          • Hoshin Kanri

            September 06, 2024 | Coach-Led Online Course

          • Lean Warehousing and Distribution Operations

            September 11, 2024 | Plant City, Florida and Gainesville, Florida

          • Key Concepts of Lean Management

            September 16, 2024 | Coach-Led Online Course

          • See all Events
  • Training & Consulting for Organizations​
        • Interested in exploring a partnership with us?
          • Schedule a Call
        • Getting Started
        • Leadership Development
        • Custom Training
        • Enterprise Transformation​
  • Store
        • Book Ordering Information
        • Shopping Cart
        • Featured books
          Managing to Learn: Using the A3 management process

          Managing to Learn: Using the A3 management process

          A3 Getting Started Guide 2

          A3 Getting Started Guide

          • See all Books
  • About Us
        • Our people
          • Senior Advisors and Staff
          • Faculty
          • Board of Directors
        • Contact Us
        • Lean Global Network
        • Press Releases
        • In the News
        • Careers
        • About us

The Lean Post / Articles / What I’ve Learned About Planning and Execution

Article graphic image with repeating icons

Executive Leadership

What I’ve Learned About Planning and Execution

By James (Jim) Womack, PhD

December 14, 2006

By the time I founded the Lean Enterprise Institute in mid-1997, I had been thinking for years about how organizations prioritize and plan. And I had carefully read the policy deployment (hoshin kanri) literature emerging from Japan since the 1970s. So I thought it would be easy to develop and implement both a long-range and a one-year plan.

FacebookTweetLinkedInPrintComment

By the time I founded the Lean Enterprise Institute in mid-1997, I had been thinking for years about how organizations prioritize and plan. And I had carefully read the policy deployment (hoshin kanri) literature emerging from Japan since the 1970s. So I thought it would be easy to develop and implement both a long-range and a one-year plan.

I asked my friend Pat Lancaster (then the Chairman of Lantech, the subject of Chapter 6 of my and Dan Jones’s Lean Thinking) to come to Boston to help us as a facilitator. Our whole team set out with great energy and two days later, after much frank discussion, we had our plan. We had agreed on our organizational direction, selected our major priorities for the next few years, set targets, and defined specific initiatives to achieve them. We had won the war against chaos and indecision!

But there was a problem: We soon discovered that we had no practical means to implement the plan. Specifically, we had no effective way to assign responsibility for our initiatives, which cut across the organization. We had no workable way to measure our progress. And we had no means of determining why we were often not getting the results we expected from our initiatives and what to do about shortfalls. In short, we had conducted a great two-day exercise with the help of a brilliant facilitator and we had produced a great plan. But it produced no benefit for our organization. Quietly, we soon abandoned the whole approach and substituted a simple annual budgeting process.

Fortunately, this simple process was sufficient for LEI to flourish as a small organization over the next decade. However, I kept reflecting on why we were so good at picking the right things to do (and creating our annual budget) but much less adept at getting the right things done. In the language of Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA), introduced by W. Edwards Deming, we were great at P but struggled with DCA.

In the past year we’ve grown dramatically and LEI has become a much more complex organization. (We now have four major product lines – each with a value-stream leader — for learning materials, education, events, and research partnerships with a range of organizations.) Suddenly our simple budgeting process was no longer adequate and I was forced to revisit the issue of prioritization and planning. At the same time, in our research activities I was watching many organizations struggle as they tried — as we had — to introduce complex planning systems derived from the standard Japanese-derived texts on hoshin kanri.

I was delighted therefore when Toyota alumnus Pascal Dennis approached me with the suggestion that strategy deployment, as he calls hoshin kanri, can be made much simpler and more effective. He proposed to write a leader’s guide that was a cross between a workbook and a novel in order to illustrate a more effective method for planning and execution. He also committed to revealing the thought process behind effective planning and execution that he had learned in his years at Toyota, not just describe the techniques.

During the past year, as I’ve reviewed Pascal’s work and tried to apply it in managing LEI, I’ve gained some real insights into how to do strategy deployment properly. Let me share them briefly:

  • The “Plan” part really is simple. But it’s critically important as you start to gain agreement on where your organization really stands, that is on its “current state.” This means developing simple, visual measures of current performance that everyone can see and agree on. Otherwise the plan is based on illusion.
  • The “Do” part will succeed if the plan tells a simple, persuasive story and each element of the plan is easily understandable by everyone. Toyota’s A3 method for describing on a single sheet of paper the issue each plan element is addressing — and the way the organization will solve it — has startling power once everyone learns how to read A3s. (I’ve been amazed at what A3 analysis has done for our value-stream management at LEI and what it has done for my ability to communicate to everyone the direction LEI is taking.)
  • The “Check” part of the plan is critical and is almost universally ignored. Yet there is no point in starting off to deploy a plan unless there is a standardized method for measuring the results and leadership commitment to follow through.
  • The “Act” or “Adjust” step is equally important but requires effective problem solving to understand why the plan is not achieving its intended results (as shown in the “Check” step.) Even organizations that check their progress are usually very weak at adjusting. Yet almost no plan, even at Toyota, produces exactly the results expected. Adjustment is inevitable and continual.
  • Every element in the plan needs a deployment leader who can look across the functions, see the whole, and take responsibility for a good result. This is like the Chief Engineer at Toyota. And the good news is that designating a deployment leader for each plan element requires no adjustment to the organization chart. Deployment leadership is simply an additional task for designated senior managers, one that becomes much easier as experience is gained over several years.
  • Some organizations can deploy plan elements for each product family value stream, as we have at LEI. However, many organizations – far more than I had realized until recently – are so unstable in every shared process that they may be better off to start with organization-wide themes like quality, delivery, and cost, in order to create basic stability before they switch to a value-stream approach.
  • Perhaps most important: It’s all about people. I’ve recently reflected on Toyota’s quality concept of “autonomation”, or jidoka, which they describe as “automation with a human touch”. This means that employees are actively engaged at every level in insuring that process technology — no matter how sophisticated — works properly to produce a good result every time. It has occurred to me that strategy deployment as it ought to be practiced is similar. It’s not an exercise in cold logic, done once and forgotten. Rather it is “hoshin kanri with a human touch” in which everyone in the organization becomes a scientist participating in continual experiments with every plan element by means of PDCA.

Best regards,
Jim

Jim Womack
Chairman & Founder
Lean Enterprise Institute

P.S. Pascal’s strategy deployment leader’s guide, Getting the Right Things Done, is now available in the LEI bookstore. It gives much better guidance than I can in a short letter on the practicalities of actually succeeding with strategy deployment. I hope you will find it useful in your organization and I imagine that it may be particularly helpful as a group reading exercise to instill the new thought process you will need in order to successfully plan and execute.

FacebookTweetLinkedInPrintComment

Written by:

James (Jim) Womack, PhD

About James (Jim) Womack, PhD

Widely considered the father of the lean movement, Womack has been talking and publishing about creating value through continuous innovation around deep customer understanding for many years. In the late eighties, he and Dan Jones led MIT’s International Motor Vehicle Research Program (IMVP), which introduced the term “lean” to describe…

Read more about James (Jim) Womack, PhD

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related

image showing ownership and responsibility at an organization

Executive Leadership

What Matters When Giving — or Accepting — the Gift of Lean Thinking and Practice

Article by Josh Howell

Podcast graphic image with repeating icons and microphones

Executive Leadership

The History of the Term “Lean”: a Conversation with Jim Womack and John Krafcik

Podcast by James (Jim) Womack, PhD and John Krafcik

various healthcare professionals using AI

Executive Leadership

AI’s Impact on Healthcare: A Conversation with Dr. Jackie Gerhart and Dr. Christopher Longhurst

Podcast by Jackie Gerhart, MD, Christopher Longhurst, MD and Matthew Savas

Related books

The Gold Mine (Audio CD)

The Gold Mine (Audio CD)

by Freddy Ballé and Michael Ballé

The Gold Mine Trilogy 4 Book Set

The Gold Mine Trilogy 4 Book Set

by Freddy Ballé and Michael Ballé

Related events

September 06, 2024 | Coach-Led Online Course

Hoshin Kanri

Learn more

September 24, 2024 | Coach-Led Online Course

Management Systems

Learn more

Explore topics

Executive Leadership graphic icon Executive Leadership

Stay up to date with the latest events, subscribe today.

Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Facebook

©Copyright 2000-2024 Lean Enterprise Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.
Lean Enterprise Institute, the leaper image, and stick figure are registered trademarks of Lean Enterprise Institute, Inc.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Learn More. ACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT