In part one of this series, we discussed the importance of the Gemba walk and how well executed and thought out Gemba Walks can drive sustained Continuous Improvement. Great Gemba Walks become a focused process whereby leadership engages with various parts of the organization to observe, learn, and provide support to meet organizational goals and objectives and more importantly, the needs of its customers. Leadership is observing, learning, and engaging where value is being created, and teaching the team members to be problem solvers to achieve continuous improvement.
Taiichi Ohno the father of the Toyota Production system, (TPS), once said: “When you walk the factory floor, (work area), you should walk in a way that takes you hours to go 100 meters.” In other words, understanding requires observation, study, and support to help drive improvement. A quick walk through will not reveal the real issues and problems getting in the way of the work. The objective is not for leadership to make the improvements, but to support those doing the work and help them identify the root causes of problems to create value and make the work safer, easier, and better. By driving out non-value-added activities, there will be sustained improvement.
An Effective Gemba Walk has 3 fundamental characteristics:
Let’s look at each of these in more detail.
Why would leadership be walking out in the Gemba? What is the value-added purpose? Is it to point out random observed issues or to observe and learn specific aspects of the operation? A focused walk may be to observe a work cell that has quality issues, or low productivity. Maybe it’s observing the finance department to understand why cash flow has become a problem, or a work area where accidents have dramatically increased over the past few months. I tell leaders to think narrow and deep when engaging with teams in the workplace. What is the specific issue the team is working on and what’s getting in the way of the work?
When you think about alignment, consider how you can improve daily work, remove waste, and improve flow. A Great Gemba walk focuses on understanding these gaps and providing support. The key is to focus on the few critical issues or opportunities.
Next time we will discuss the 3 Stages of a Focused Gemba Walk:
In the meanwhile, read part 1 of the Gemba Walk series. IMEC is here to support your improvement transformations. Let us help you develop your robust focused Gemba Walk process - schedule 15 minutes with myself or another IMEC expert to discuss your specific needs.
WHERE WORK HAPPENS: The Power of Gemba Walks for Continuous Improvement
During this seminar you will learn how to conduct an effective Gemba Walk and enhance your team’s continuous improvement journey.
LEADER STANDARD WORK: The Glue of Sustaining Continuous Improvement
This session focuses on the how Leader Standard Work (LSW) effectively changes the paradigm of how leaders work with their teams. LSW is a best practice moving leadership away from an audit mentality toward structured coaching, which instills a sense of ownership, accountability, and continuous improvement. It is a shift in how we lead and drive improvement.