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Improve
Details
Improve: The Next Generation of Continuous Improvement for Knowledge Work presents lean thinking for professionals, those who Peter Drucker called knowledge workers. It translates the brilliant insights from Toyota's factory floor to the desktops of engineers, marketers, attorneys, accountants, doctors, managers, and all those who "think for a living." The Toyota Production System (TPS) was born a century ago to an almost unknown car maker who today is credited with starting the third wave of the Industrial Revolution. TPS principles, better known as lean thinking or continuous improvement, are simple: increase customer value, cut hidden waste, experiment to learn, and respect others. As simple as they are, they are difficult to apply to the professions, probably because of the misconception that knowledge work is wholly non-repetitive. But much of our everyday work does repeat, and in great volume: approvals, problem-solving, project management, hiring, and prioritization are places where huge waste hides. Eliminate waste and you delight customers and clients, increase financial performance, and grow professional job satisfaction, because less waste means more success and more time for expertise and creativity.
This book is a valuable resource for leaders of professional teams who want to improve productivity, quality, and engagement in their organizations.
Autorentext
George Ellis has worked in product development for 35 years. He first experienced the concept of continuous improvement two decades ago through the Danaher Corporation, one of the world's foremost lean thinking companies. Danaher transformed itself in the 1980s, modeling its Danaher Business System (DBS) on the Toyota Production System. Ellis has had numerous leadership roles at Danaher, including Vice President of Global Engineering for X-Rite from 2015 to 2018.
In 2019, Ellis joined Envista Holdings Corporation, a new spin-off from Danaher for the dental industry, as Vice President of Innovation. There he spends every day immersed in lean knowledge work, deploying, improving, and sustaining new product development workflows in EBS, Envista's brand of lean knowledge. He also wrote Project Management for Product Development, Control System Design Guide (4th edition), and Observers in Control Systems, all from Elsevier.
Inhalt
Foreword xiii
Endorsements xv
Preface xvii
Acknowledgments xxi
30% of what you think is wrong 1
A brilliant insight 17
Creating value from knowledge work 41
The lean equation 51
DIMINISH: Recognizing the 8 Wastes of Knowledge Work 65
Simplify, engage, and experiment 77
Reduce Waste #1: Discord 109
Reduce Waste #2: Information Friction 141
Reduce Waste #3: More-is-Better Thinking 165
Reduce Waste #4: Inertia to Change 207
Reduce Waste #5: No-Win Contests 219
Reduce Waste #6: Inferior Problem Solving 229
Reduce Waste #7: Solution Blindness 253
Reduce Waste #8: Hidden Errors 269
Standardize workflow 287
Workflow improvement cycle 311
Workflow-Checklists and expert rule sets 321
Workflow-Problem Solve-Select 333
Workflow-Visual management for initiatives and projects 345
Workflow-Visual management with buffer 367
Workflow-Kanban and Kamishibai: Just-In-Time Rationalization 401
Workflow-Putting out "fires 427
Workflow-Visualizing revenue gaps 439
Workflow-Leadership review of knowledge work 451
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09780128095195
- Genre Environmental Technology
- Herausgeber Elsevier Science & Technology
- Gewicht 750g
- Untertitel The Next Generation of Continuous Improvement for Knowledge Work
- Autor Ellis George
- Titel Improve
- Veröffentlichung 13.06.2020
- ISBN 978-0-12-809519-5
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- EAN 9780128095195
- Jahr 2020
- Größe H229mm x B152mm
- Sprache Englisch