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1st Edition

Lean for the Long Term Sustainment is a Myth, Transformation is Reality

    ISBN 9781482257168
    226 Pages 60 B/W Illustrations
    Published April 21, 2015 by Productivity Press

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    ISBN 9781138463936
    Published August 15, 2017 by Productivity Press

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    Original Price $220.00
    Sale Price USD $176.00
    ISBN 9780429256851
    226 Pages
    Published August 15, 2017 by Productivity Press

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    The average tenure of a departing CEO has declined from approximately 10 years in 2000 to 8.1 years in 2012. Maintaining a customer-focused Lean strategy and continuous improvement culture can become a challenge when management changes often, unless it has become an institutionalized company-branded business management system for the company.

    Lean for the Long Term
    allows readers to benefit from the operating experience and research of the authors who have been deeply involved in leading Lean transformations that last in today’s ever-changing business landscape. It presents a Lean management system model that encompasses leadership, process, and growth as the model to drive business performance.

    The authors investigate the fragile nature of a Lean culture and the resulting effects on people and the company when the culture shifts. They illustrate the methods several companies have used to achieve successful Lean transformations that last and also offer guidance on how to build your own action plan based on the best practices outlined in the text.

    Until now, there have been few books to supply in-depth discussions on Lean as a strategy and management system. Filling this need, this book will help you to move toward a broader, more strategic use of Lean principles in your business.

    The book uses clear language to present insights on how company leaders and Lean practitioners can improve communication. After reading the book, you will better understand how your company operates, how to align your efforts, and how to decide what to do despite the complexity of day-to-day business operations.

    Total Business Thinking Required
    Leaders at Every Level
    The Language Is Important
    Learning the Language
    Aligning Lean Speak with the Business Speak
    Bilingual Language of Business
    Your Company?

    How Lean Fails
    TPS outside of Toyota
    CEO Transition and Change
    Focus on the Business Model
    So What Is a Lean Management System?
    Your Company?

    Top 10 Contributors to Failure
    Top 10 Failure Modes Discussion
    Takeaways
    Endnotes

    Achieving Alignment
    How Lean Practitioners and Business Executives Can Communicate
    Lean Practitioner Communication Guidelines
    Upper Management Communication Guidelines
    Common Ground
    Top Management’s Job
    Setting Long-Term Goals
    Policy Deployment Using Catchball Communications
    Lean Management System
    Takeaways

    What the Board Should Know about Lean
    Purpose, Authority, and Responsibility of the Board of Directors
    So What Do We Want the Board to Do?
    Organizational Alignment
    Does the Board Set the Company Culture?
    Extinction Is an Option
    What a Lean Strategy Does
    Amalgam Business Context
    Takeaway Questions to Consider for Your Company
    NCR Timeline

    Using Your Lean Culture to Achieve the CEO’s Goals
    Worker Engagement
    Lean Culture and the CEO’s Strategy
    Ford Motor Company
    Hillenbrand, Inc
    Autoliv
    Toyota
    Lean Measures Turn into Financial Measures
    Management Questions about Continuous Improvement Projects
    William Baker’s Experience
    Helping Upper Management Achieve Lean for the Long Term
    Company Strategy
    Mentoring People
    Customers
    Growth
    Financial
    Suppliers
    Culture
    Endnotes

    As a Lean Practitioner, What Your CEO Wants You to Know
    Introduction
    Identify the Customer Segments and Their Characteristics
    Customer Value and Demand
    Scope the Required Infrastructure
    Describe the Future State and Actions to Get There
    Results
    Takeaways

    Lean across the Organization

    Bridge to Breakthrough Opportunities
    Transforming Marketing and Sales
    Streamline Operations and Reduce Overall Footprint
    Strengthen Product Development Capabilities
    Takeaways

    Building Your Plan

    Roadmap to Lean Success
    Key Drivers of Lean for the Long Term
    1. Leadership
    Leadership Team
    Changing Leadership Trends
    2. Focus on the Business Model
    3. Lean across the Organization
    The Lean Journey—Understanding It’s a Long Journey and There Will Be Culture Change for All
    Phase 1: Use of Continuous Improvement Tools and Systems
    Phase 2: Lean Management System
    Phase 2: Expand Lean and Involve the Entire Organization
    Phase 3: Involving the Board of Directors
    4. Consistent Communications
    5. Lean Infrastructure
    Lean Staffing Organization
    Insertion of the Lean Practitioner into the Business
    6. Development of Culture
    Understanding It’s a Long Journey and There Will Be Culture Change for All
    Organizational Learning in the Culture
    Time Allocation—Your Most Precious Resource
    7. Lean Strategy and Interfacing with the Board of Directors
    Framing Your Plan
    Flexibility Is Required
    Checklists
    Checklist for Building Your Plan: Lean Practitioner
    Checklist for Building Your Plan: Upper Management
    Checklist for Building Your Plan: Board of Directors

    Index

    Biography

    Bill Baker has been a frequent speaker at Speed To Excellence on benchmarking, performance measurement, knowledge management, Raytheon Six Sigma, and the Lean Enterprise. He has been instrumental in assisting several companies and organizations pursue their strategic objectives, including Raytheon, Texas Instruments, Northrop Grumman, Sandia, Kirtland AFB, ESCO, AME, APQC, U.S. Air Force, U.S. Army, ASQ, and the Shingo Prize.

    Mr. Baker is a senior Shingo Prize examiner and was a key design contributor to the Lean certification process developed by AME-Shingo-SME and launched in 2006.

    He was responsible for knowledge management, benchmarking, and the benchmarking process at both Texas Instruments and Raytheon from 1990 until 2004. He trained and conducted numerous benchmarking teams and projects, ranging from strategic to tactical focus. He led the Raytheon effort to benchmark Six Sigma strategies, including site visits to GE and Allied Signal. Under his leadership and planning, Raytheon received the MAKE (Most Admired Knowledge Enterprise) Finalist designation in the United States by Teleos in 2003 and was the North American winner in 2004, 2005, and 2006.

    Earlier in his career he was the manufacturing manager on several high-profile missile/electronic systems, including Shrike, Paveway, Harpoon Seeker, TOW Night Sight, HARM, and Tacit Rainbow, as well as the Lunar Mass Spectrometer experiments on Apollo 15, 16, and 17. He was the U.S. Air Force engineering chief, responsible for evaluating satellite launches at Vandenberg AFB, California.

    He has contributed articles to the National Productivity Review, Target, and Quality Progress, and his work has been featured in numerous books.

    Ken Rolfes, president of KDR Associates, Inc., works with his customers to develop business performance improvement programs on a focused or enterprise-wide basis for service and manufacturing companies. He helps busi¬nesses craft and execute winning value creation and growth agendas that maximize the value of the business to its customers, employees, and shareholders.

    Ken has more than 35 years senior operations management experience for public and private companies. He served as COO and VP in mid-cap and start-up companies and held key man-agement positions in product management, manufacturing, supply chain management, and quality assurance for NCR and Control Data. He has worked extensively with businesses that design, manufacture, and market technically based products for the medical device, industrial product, and computer industries and has guided organizations in aerospace, military, manufacturing, retail, and service industries.

    Ken holds a BS in industrial engineering and a MBA in finance. He has presented at various industry and AME national conferences and at workshops, acted as contributing editor for Modern Woodworking magazine, and served as an instructor for San Diego State University in the Lean Enterprise Program. Ken currently serves as director of the Association for Manufacturing Excellence (AME).

    Lean for the Long Term is one of the only books that presents Lean as a comprehensive business model and not just a set of tools in a toolbox. An engaging read that will help any company maximize its full business potential. It is a must-read for business leaders, C-suite executives, and board members.
    —Luke Faulstick, Co-Owner, President, and CEO, PPI

    Despite indisputable potential to transform any organization to great, most Lean transformations fail to get companies to their true potential. Even fewer are able to sustain world-class performance and continuing improvement for the long term. What we know beyond a shadow of a doubt is that leadership matters, and it really matters to Lean movements. Baker and Rolfes take the reader through a myriad of thoughtful analysis and recommendations on how to successfully transform an organization and its leadership, and keep it on a perpetual cycle of improvement.
    —Dan McDonnell, VP Integrated Supply Chain, Ingersoll Rand

    Finally, we see a book making the connection between what sometimes looks to be two different worlds in the business environment:, the strategy and execution/tactics. This is a topic that has not been openly discussed but definitely a vital one for the long run. A must-read for Lean practitioners, executives, and board members interested in how to address the differences in approach to set the foundation for a sustained Lean business implementation and create value in their businesses.
    —Mauro G Gonzalez, Sr. Operations Manager, Littelfuse Inc.

    Lean for the Long Term goes beyond the existing literature on Lean tools and philosophy to describe how to create a Lean transformation that is sustainable across the entire organization for the long haul. Of particular note are the discussions on why transformations fail, and implementation strategies from a variety of perspectives, such as CEO, board member, and Lean practitioner.
    —Kevin Meyer, Co-Founder, Gemba Academy

    A fine review of our Lean journey seen through the eyes of two execs who lived it. Together they cover the operating fundamentals supporting Lean, as well as great illustrations from Lean pioneers.
    Patricia E. Moody, Author and Manufacturing and Supply Management Consultant

    This book offers valuable insight to use Lean as a management strategy where it can create a value culture that customers are willing to pay for. Lean is about honoring people, customers, and processes. This book is a must-have for anyone wanting to drive an organization through performance.
    —Dale Crownover, President /CEO, Texas Nameplate Company, and Two-Time Winner of the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award

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