It Shouldn’t Be This Hard

by Ken Snyder

I have often heard that “Lean takes 10 years minimum,” or “Where you start depends on where your organization is at,” or “Implementing Lean is an art, not a science,” and other excuses for why a transformation should take an inordinately long period of time. While I believed some of these excuses earlier in my career, I am increasingly convinced that these are really excuses for not having a scientific methodology for shortening the lead time in a Lean implementation. I also strongly believe that shortening the lead time will result in higher levels of achievement in the long run.

 

These excuses remind me of the excuses made for explaining the elite performers in sports, music, chess, etc. The common excuse was that any high performer in any of these areas was “naturally gifted,” thereby implying that normal people can’t do it if they don’t have the right genes. These excuses have been proven wrong in every field studied. There are scientific ways to shorten the development time, and, ultimately, raise the performance level. Having a number of piano players in my family, including a daughter who was a piano performance major in college, I have witnessed first-hand the deliberate practice habits that lead to ever-improving skill levels and better and better performance levels. Piano training has become much more scientific – i.e. the practice regimens that lead to a higher skill level have been proven by trial and error over the centuries, and can be taught in a systematic way. I think the same can be true of Lean implementation, but we haven’t looked at it in a scientific way, nor have we developed the practice regimen.

 

I first got the idea that there must be a way to shorten the effective implementation of Lean when reading Malcolm Gladwell’s book Outliers. In his book, Gladwell cites research stating that 10,000 hours of practice can lead to expert level performance in just about anything. Since reading that book, I have read several books by the psychologists who have done research in this field. The books include:

And some additional application-oriented books on the topic:

 

After reading these books, here are some things I think in applying these lessons to the Lean community:

 

It doesn’t have to be this hard!

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