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lean plus six-sigma not lean six-sigma

Toyotas innovative coal powered car excites consultants

Coal powered carFrom April onwards due to the fact that Toyota sold more cars and trucks than General Motors (despite ongoing quality problems) all consultants gave a cheer and began to celebrate, throwing caution to the wind and splashing huge wads of money around the crap tables of Vegas. Why? Because they:

sell the no-waste business regimen known as lean manufacturing, a regimen that is popular due almost entirely to Toyota’s success.

Clearly we all know that lean is a just a crazy fad dreamed-up by these despicable consultants as:

a survey by management consulting firm Bain shows that just 19 percent of companies that have tried it are happy with the results

And these consultants just jump between industries in search for bigger and bigger pay-rises:

Those willing to jump from manufacturing companies to hospitals or banks are getting pay raises of 30 percent to 40 percent, compared with 20 percent raises moving from one manufacturing company to another.

Just think if Toyota had created a new hybrid car as well – perhaps profits would have been even higher (see photo above – the coal fired car!). But at least one article eventually concludes what I knew all along, that six sigma and innovation can work together as six sigma is exploitative while innovation is explorative:

smart companies separate the more ambitious efforts at innovation from ongoing efforts at continuous improvement. That allows for different processes, structure, and cultures to emerge within the same company.

these were:

successful 90% of the time

The rules for success were:

  1. Separate the efforts.
  2. Appoint an ambidextrous senior manager to oversee both efforts.
  3. Support both teams appropriately.

Hopefully, this is the start of moving away from the mindset which gives rise to comment like these:

The more you hard-wire a company on total quality management, [the more] it is going to hurt breakthrough innovation

Just remember to strike a balance between effort and documentation in six sigma projects though!

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May 31, 2007 - Posted by | Lean Manufacturing, News, Six Sigma

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