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
          6 Insights on How to Show Respect for People: A Lean Post Roundup

          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 / 6 Insights on How to Show Respect for People: A Lean Post Roundup

6 Insights on How to Show Respect for People: A Lean Post Roundup

Executive Leadership

6 Insights on How to Show Respect for People: A Lean Post Roundup

By Tom Ehrenfeld

January 26, 2021

Practicing respect in a lean environment requires both a general mindset committed to the practice and constant daily actions grounded in the work. This roundup of recent articles from The Lean Post shares an overview of how lean thinkers translate this ideal into daily work.

FacebookTweetLinkedInPrintComment

Respect for people and its cousin the dignity of work are central to lean practice. Two years ago, we published a roundup of articles exploring this theme and since then have explored it frequently enough to post this roundup of articles published.

These articles can help you develop a practical and mindful approach toward coaching others to improve the work. This benign aspiration cannot be achieved through polite behaviors alone but must be anchored in an intentional engagement with the work and the worker. This approach can be grounded in mutual observation and experimentation, guided by a disciplined method of improvement.

These articles can help you develop a practical and mindful approach toward coaching others to improve the work. It cannot be overemphasized that improving the work always starts with an intense exploration of the work itself: “Lean is a ‘learn by doing’ exercise and not a classroom training approach,” says Art Byrne in his Ask Art column Am I Showing Respect for People by Asking for Fast Action? A veteran of more than 30 lean transformations at Wiremold and other companies he led through private equity work, Byrne has found that sustained kaizen activity targeted at aggressive tangible improvements engages every individual in understanding and improving the work. Every person must learn and contribute their improvement ideas to the team, he says, noting that “the more kaizens you do, the faster this teamwork spreads.”

Fostering respect for people involves a huge shift in managerial thinking, to be sure. Amy Edmondson suggests that a conscious effort to shift how leaders “frame the work” has enormous leverage. In her Frame the Work for Safety and Learning, she defines frames as assumptions or beliefs that we layer onto reality, and notes that focusing on short-term issues often blinds us to “the effects of our cognitive frames on our interpretation of what we see.”

She calls upon leaders to be aware of and manage such frames intentionally. Different types of work call for different framing. “If near-perfection is what is needed to satisfy demanding car customers, leaders must know to frame the work by alerting workers to the opportunity to catch and correct tiny deviations before the car goes down the assembly line,” she writes. “Workers must adapt a kaizen frame that celebrates the value of learning—to become willing to engage in the unnatural act of speaking up about tiny imperfections.”

Touching upon a favorite topic of framing failure, she notes that good (pro-learning and improvement) leaders create a sense of psychological safety, communicating to people that failure is okay, convincing everyone that, “I’m not pro-failure, I’m pro-learning.”

Respect Can Show Up…Quietly

Again, enacting respect for people is less of a challenge involving etiquette and protocol and more of a deep reflection on pursuing tangible ways of leading and managing. Matt Savas’s great article The Quiet Factory shares his wonder at something that he did not hear at his gemba walk at Toyota Motor Kyushu (TMK): noise.

TMK has established noise reduction as a corporate objective to create a better work environment for its workers, he says. From a quality perspective, he notes that a quieter factory means that workers are better able to hear the tell-tale clicks and pops that subtly indicate when operations are running smoothly. Moreover, the broader challenge of maintaining a dynamic workforce in an aging Japanese population has led the company to respond with countermeasures designed for their current workforce.

Savas shows a tint of awe for how the company has married its core value of respect for people with a pressing outside challenge, Enacting respect for people is less of a challenge involving etiquette and protocol and more of a deep reflection on pursuing tangible ways of leading and managing. tackling these goals by tangibly creating a factory with less audible waste. “Toyota faces a major external challenge (tightening labor market) and has addressed it by creating a major internal challenge (reducing factory noise).”

Katrina Appell builds on this theme of pragmatic approaches to respect in her article on How to Show Respect During a Pandemic. Like any core lean ideal, to have leaders showing respect for people each day calls for a collaborative practice rather than a top-down (and potentially self-congratulatory) exercise.

For example, candid feedback on ongoing performance is crucial. “The risk to leaders who misinterpret showing respect as being nice is that they will not give people the feedback they need to learn and improve,” she says. By working to understand the current work situation first, through asking the worker what is going on, leaders deepen every person’s grasp of the current state and provide the foundation for developing a person’s capabilities and maximizing individual and team performance.

(Note: Katrina has expanded on these thoughts in a terrific article on her blog.)

Simply Listening Can Be A Loud First Step

Asking workers for their input can be tougher and more counter-intuitive than one imagines, shares lean leader Joel Daly—but can ultimately result in dramatic shared improvement. His simple tale of Showing Respect: Here’s How Emmanuel Proposed A More Reliable Shipping Rack details how a dramatic improvement in the company’s shipping racks came about when Joel…asked his workers to help with this problem.

After a worker was injured from interacting with the company’s shipping racks, Joel took the radical step of raising this topic in a daily huddle. He was surprised later to find a detailed plan for a more reliable shipping rack created by Emmanuel, who had taken the initiative to meet with other group leads and sketched out a potential countermeasure. For Daly, this was a revelation about “uncovering neglected human potential.” Grateful for the circumstances leading to his inquiry, he says: “It was precisely because of the problem, not in spite of it, that we realized we had another great lean thinker on our team.”

Creating an environment of respect boils down to ensuring that all workers—as professionals—have working conditions that monitor what they need to get their job done. Such isolated examples of showing respect aggregate into a broader and more comprehensive organizational mindset. Respect for people can be seen as a systems approach to managing others that managers create with rigorous tools and techniques. In his article Active Caring, Jim Benson cites how Turner Construction ensures organizational respect by creating what it calls The Right Environment. “This is a precursor to continuous improvement that makes sure that people not only have agency but that they have a social system that respects them and expects them, as professionals, to act on that agency.”

This approach boils down to ensuring that all workers—as professionals—have working conditions that monitor what they need to get their job done. At a one billion dollar construction project, this translated into an onsite trailer where daily huddles of teams and subteams would start the day with calisthenics, a safety initiative to prevent injuries. This daily routine was just a precursor to get aligned on specific work targets and how they were achieving them. Reviewing the actual daily practices manifesting their values became a natural habit.

Benson notes that creating an environment in which a system (one that, say, respects people) can operate is an essential first step.

“Above all, you can see the desire of the people in the trailer to extend the gifts that they had given themselves by setting up the right environment. This tells me that if you give somebody not just permission to pay attention and be nice, but you actually give them a system that expects that, then that becomes part of their job. After that, no one ever needs accountability because the system itself has now fostered professional responsibility. It’s absolutely beautiful.

This system provides what is pretty close to immediate feedback. It supports the shared expectation that everyone’s job is to make sure that the building is built safely, on time, on budget, in a humane way. And the shared work approach continually monitors the key challenge of, ‘how can I personally make today better than yesterday?’”

*****

What to do next: 

Are you ready for a division- or organization-wide transformation? Learn more about LEI’s Co-Learning Partnership program. 

FacebookTweetLinkedInPrintComment

Written by:

Tom Ehrenfeld

About Tom Ehrenfeld

Tom Ehrenfeld is a writer and editor living in Cambridge, MA. A former writer/editor with Inc. Magazine and Harvard Business Review, he is the author of The Startup Garden: How Growing A Business Grows You. He works as a consulting editor for LEI and with many other lean authors. Nine of his edited books have won the Shingo Research…

Read more about Tom Ehrenfeld

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