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Lean is the most important
business model for competitive success today. Yet companies still
struggle to sustain enduring and deep-rooted business success from
their lean implementation efforts.
The most important problem
for these companies is becoming lean: how can they advance
beyond realizing isolated gains from deploying lean tools, to
fundamentally changing how they operate, think, and learn? In other
words, how can companies learn to go beyond lean turnaround to
achieve lean transformation?
The Lean Manager: A Novel
of Lean Transformation, by lean experts Michael
and Freddy Ballé, addresses this critical problem. As we move from
what Jim Womack, author, lean management authority, and LEI
founder, calls “the era of lean tools to the era of lean
management,” The Lean Manager gives companies a definitive
guide for sustaining their ability to learn and improve operations
and financial performance, while continually developing
people.
“The only way to become
and stay lean is to produce lean managers,” says Womack.
“Every isolated effort will recede—or fail—unless companies learn
to use the lean process as a way of developing individual
problem-solvers with the ownership, initiative, and know-how to
solve problems, learn, and ultimately coach new individuals in this
discipline. That’s why this book matters so much.”
The Lean
Manager, the sequel to the
Ballé’s international bestselling business
novel The Gold
Mine, tells the compelling
story of plant manager Andrew Ward as he goes through the
challenging but rewarding journey to becoming a lean manager. Under
the guidance of Phil Jenkinson (whose own lean journey was at the
core of The Gold Mine), Ward learns to use a deep
understanding of lean tools, as well as a technical know-how of his
plant’s operations, to foster a lean attitude that sustains
continuous improvement.
Where The Gold Mine
shows you how to introduce a complete lean system, The Lean
Manager demonstrates how to sustain it. Ward moves beyond
fluency with tools to changing his behavior as a manager and
leader. He shifts from giving orders and answers to asking the
right questions so people identify and address problems. He learns
how to use tools to unleash the creativity and motivation of
people, so they learn how to solve problems as well as coach and
teach others to solve problems. Ward learns how to create lean
managers.
“I am excited and have
hopes that this book will enlighten readers about what it really
means to live a business transformation that puts customers first
and does this through developing people,” said Jeffrey Liker,
author of The Toyota Way and professor of Industrial and
Operations Engineering at the University of Michigan. “People who
do the work have to improve the work. There are tools, but they are
not tools for ‘improving the process.’ They are tools for making
problems visible and for helping people think about how to solve
those problems.”
Author: Ballé, Michael and
Freddy Ballé
Publisher: Lean Enterprise Institute, Inc.
ISBN: 978-1-934109-25-0
Number of Pages: 471
List Price: A$44.00
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