Lean Blog Audio

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 53:18:21
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Sinopsis

Mark Graban reads and expands upon selected posts from LeanBlog.org. Topics include Lean principles and leadership in healthcare, manufacturing, business, and the world around us.Learn more at http://www.leanblog.org/audio Become a supporter of this podcast:https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

Episodios

  • A Lean Guy Listens to NPR: NICU Waste,

    31/07/2015 Duración: 07min

    http://leanblog.org/audio77 I did a similar post in 2012, but here's a post where I share some recent NPR stories that I've heard recently (through the NPR One app, which I absolutely love).This is similar to my "A Lean Guy Reads..." series, my "Cleaning Out the Backlog" series, and the "Stuff I'm Reading" posts. Not All NICU Babies Should Get the Same Treatments Shrinking and Cutting Isn't the Only Path for Hospitals More Expensive Cancer Drugs Aren't Always Better Getting Patients Involved in Choosing Better Care --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • Key Points About Kaizen from Japanese Hospitals,

    30/07/2015 Duración: 07min

    http://leanblog.org/audio76 The Kaizen approach to continuous improvement is important to me, of course. The Japanese hospitals we've visited have a strong tradition of practicing Total Quality Management. Some are now embracing Kaizen as "daily continuous improvement" in addition to their six month long TQM projects.We're again organizing a Lean Healthcare Study Trip to Japan, which will take place September 13 to 19 in Nagoya and Tokyo. Learn more via http://www.japanleantrip.com. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • Model Lines and Model Cells as a Lean Transformation Strategy

    28/07/2015 Duración: 10min

    There's another approach that goes underappreciated, I think -- the "model line" or "model cell" approach. It has nothing to do with fashion models. I don't like the term "cell" because it might make people think of a prison or a gulag. Then again, the word "line" might make people think of "assembly line medicine" in a negative way. Maybe "model area" is a better term? I'll think about that as I work on the updated 3rd edition of my book Lean Hospitals. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • Parody: Keith Olber-Lean and the

    27/07/2015 Duración: 08min

    http://leanblog.org/audio74 In this post, I'll be presenting a parody video of Keith Olbermann's "worst persons in the sports world" videos.I don't know how much overlap there is in people who read my blog and people who are fans of Olbermann. I've always been a big fan of Olbermann the sports guy... Olbermann the political commentator not so much. But, "the worst persons in the world" is a bit that he's done on MSNBC and ESPN. In this video, I'm playing a character... a parody you might call Keith Olber-Lean. I'll be taking some shots at people... naming names as the tongue-in-cheek "worst persons in the Lean world." This video might seem mean spirited. I'm not normally this mean spirited on my blog, although I've made comments about these issues and people before (worse, worser, and worst). Olbermann often seems mean spirited. But, he's entertaining and usually makes a serious point through humor. I'll try to do the same here. The serious points I'm making are: Lean leaders and consultants should be h

  • "Lean Won't Work Here... We're Different"

    24/07/2015 Duración: 09min

    I'm sure anybody who has done any work with Lean has heard these words said in one form or another, often prefaced with a "You don't understand..."We're different. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • The Kaizen Approach to Getting Others Comfortable with Sushi

    23/07/2015 Duración: 07min

    What did I learn about learning to eat sushi and incremental Kaizen (change for the better) during my 2014 Lean Healthcare Study Trip to Japan? Listen to find out... and learn more about our upcoming Japan trip at http://www.japanleantrip.com. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • "This American Life" on NUMMI Lessons,

    23/07/2015 Duración: 15min

    http://leanblog.org/audio71 Episode #403 of the public radio program "This American Life" originally aired in 2010, telling the story of the NUMMI plant that was a joint venture between GM and Toyota (it's now where they build Teslas). As a joint venture, that meant the closed-down GM Fremont plant was re-opened to be managed under the Toyota Production System.The This American Life story asks why GM didn't learn more of the lessons from NUMMI. Well, GM did learn many lessons, but it wasn't enough to save the company from bankruptcy (going from 50% market share to just over 20% will do that, regardless of how Lean your factories are, when you have moreretirees than active employees). The story re-aired on NPR stations last weekend, which I learned of when many of you emailed me or tweeted at me about the program... and even some of my personal Facebook friends who don't share my passion for Lean shared the link with me. What makes it a throwback, in a way, is that I first blogged about the episode in 2010

  • Fear, Lies, Failure, and Success (and Laughs)

    20/07/2015 Duración: 07min

    http://leanblog.org/audio70 How did a few episodes of HBO's "Silicon Valley" make Mark Graban think about continuous improvement and the need to avoid a "culture of fear" in an organization? --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • Healthcare Headlines in the UK are Mostly Similar to the US

    18/07/2015 Duración: 11min

    How can the NHS reduce waiting times without throwing money at the problem? Are they using Lean to increase capacity and throughput in a way that also improves quality? The recipe is "reduce waste."There's usually the need to improve three things in any industry: Quality Cost Speed Traditionally, people would say you can get it "good and cheap but not fast" or some combination of just two of those things. Lean healthcare helps show that we can improve in all three dimensions simultaneously. We need "better, faster, cheaper" healthcare around the world and we need to go about it right way - improving systems rather than just cutting costs in a way that slows care or hurts quality. Big challenges, global challenges. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • Reader Question from an MD:

    30/06/2015 Duración: 05min

    http://leanblog.org/audio68 Before I head out on vacation, here is a reader question that I am sharing for your input.I'm sharing this with permission and I'm obscuring a few details at their request.Please read and leave a comment below the post. My approval of comments might be a bit slow after Tuesday evening as I start to travel. The Question: I thought I'd get in touch. I have genuinely listened to every podcast you have on your site. They're brilliant, and I'm very grateful for the time you put into making them. I'm getting in touch because I'm faced with a question I've never heard tackled anywhere. As the most accessible lean expert I know of, I thought I'd come to you. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • Visual Management for an International Flight,

    29/06/2015 Duración: 07min

    http://leanblog.org/audio67 My wife and I are getting ready to leave tomorrow night for a two week vacation, so it jogged my memory about this story I saw back in December in the WSJ: Airlines Try to Make Coach Classier. Anything that makes long flights more bearable is good news to me.One detail that caught my attention in the WSJ article was this: "Etihad is rolling out new economy features taken from business and first class. There's nighttime turndown service--flight attendants put the window shade down, put a blanket over the passenger and offer hot chocolate or camomile tea. There's a new coach amenity kit coming, with a sleep mask that's green on one side if you want someone to wake you up for breakfast and red on the other if you want to sleep as long as possible. The amenity kit doubles as a storage pouch for eyeglasses and stray pocket items you don't want to sleep on." --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • Kaizen Hints from Heloise, or, If Kaizen is Common Sense,

    26/06/2015 Duración: 06min

    http://leanblog.org/audio66 I'm a big nerd in that I love reading newspapers basically cover to cover. I'm a nerd in many ways, I guess. You don't have to be a survey nerd to take my short reader survey (and you might win a book!).I was a pretty unusual child, reading the entire Detroit Free Press every morning before school. I was a news nerd then. I wanted to be a sportswriter, since the father of one of my best friends from elementary school got to travel with the Detroit Tigers as a "beat writer." I am still a pretty big consumer of newspapers, often in print form (although I read the WSJ on my iPad). Recently, I was perusing the San Antonio paper (cover to cover) and even glanced at the "Hints from Heloise" column that was traditionally aimed at housewives (that seems like an outdated sexist way of saying it, but that's the history of the column). --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • Would the WSJ Blame "Just in Time" for the Stanley Cup

    25/06/2015 Duración: 09min

    http://leanblog.org/audio65 The Wall St Journal loves writing about how "Just In Time" (JIT) is a risky inventory strategy. See my past posts about how the WSJ is so often wrong on this.The WSJ seem to only understand Lean as JIT, as opposed to seeing Lean as a broader methodology and management system. JIT is just one component of the Toyota Production System (built-in quality being the other). See Toyota's website for info straight from the source. Whenever there is a highly unusual event, like the Japanese earthquake and tsunami, the WSJ will say "see, just in time doesn't work." Well, keeping a lot of inventory stored in a warehouse isn't a good strategy if an earthquake or tornado hits the warehouse. The Stanley Cup Was Late! Even though I'm a Detroit Red Wings fan,I can say congrats to the Chicago Blackhawks for winning the Stanley Cup Finals in the NHL. Chicago was ahead in the series meaning they were in a position to put the series away last Monday night, playing at home. --- Support this podc

  • How Would You Respond to This Kaizen Idea?

    24/06/2015 Duración: 11min

    http://leanblog.org/audio64 When I teach about Kaizen and continuous improvement, I try to use scenarios and cases to help people think through how they would respond to, coach, and collaborate on employee ideas.One key point is that leaders have to thank employees for pointing out problems or opportunities for improvement. They need to do so even if they think the idea or proposed solution isn't ideal or might not work. Here is a "Kaizen card" that I usually show in my training and coaching sessions, areal scenario: --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • I'm Moderating a #LeanStartup Webcast Today:

    19/06/2015 Duración: 09min

    http://leanblog.org/audio63 I've been intrigued by the "Lean Startup" movement since I first saw Eric Ries speak at MIT back in late 2009. I've read his book The Lean Startup, have attended a bunch of the conferences (speaking at two of them - see video of one). I've interviewed Eric on my podcast series (listen here and here).There's a lot to learn and apply in life and at KaiNexus. I'm by no means an expert in Lean Startup approaches... but at the core, Lean is Lean. Eric gives credit to Taiichi Ohno in his book (and listen to us discuss that here). I'm excited to have been named a "faculty member" to help plan thisyear's Lean Startup Conference, to be held in San Francisco this November. My role is to help identify and recruit speakers to talk about "traditional Lean" -- the universal Lean philosophies and management practices that apply in factories, healthcare, startups, etc. Sort of like what John Shook talked about last year. So, I hope to see you there! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm

  • Visiting MIT, Learning about "The Good Jobs Strategy"

    19/06/2015 Duración: 12min

    http://leanblog.org/audio62 Last week was an amazing week of learning and networking. I was in Dallas for the Lean Healthcare Transformation Summit (as I wrote about). As I mentioned yesterday, it was also my wife's five year reunion from her MIT master's program. As I also mentioned, I nerded out and sat in on a number of lectures that were part of the weekend.I'll also blog later about Steve Spear's lecture (you likely know him from the Lean community), but I also really enjoyed a lecture by MIT professor Zeynep Ton, from the Sloan School of Management (she's formerly of HBS... and also an industrial engineer, like me). Prof. Ton gave an engaging lecture on her book The Good Jobs Strategy: How the Smartest Companies Invest in Employees to Lower Costs and Boost Profits. I had heard of the book but hadn't yet gotten to the Kindle sample that I downloaded, yet alone the full book. The Kindle version is only $5.99, by the way, or it's free if you have a "Kindle Unlimited" membership. I've finally read the bo

  • A Lean Guy Reads the Boston Papers: Facts, Respect,

    18/06/2015 Duración: 09min

    http://leanblog.org/audio61 My wife and I were in Boston over the weekend, as it was her fifth reunion from her MIT master’s program. I’m also an alum, but was considered a “guest” since I graduated 16 years ago from my program and you don’t have to have an MIT degree to know 16 divided by 5 is not an integer. Being MIT, the reunion wasn’t just about parties (and it’s not a homecoming weekend with a football game, as my Northwestern 20th reunion will be this fall). The reunion was also full of lectures by alumni and notable faculty. I’ll be blogging soon about lectures by MIT Sloan professors Steve Spear (check out my podcasts with him) and Zeynep Ton (I’m reading her book The Good Jobs Strategy now and hope she’ll be a podcast guest too). A few things caught my eye on the Boston Herald and Boston Globe on Saturday. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • First Look: "Management on the Mend" by Dr. John Toussaint

    15/06/2015 Duración: 06min

    At this year's Lean Healthcare Transformation Summit (see my summary here) Dr. John Toussaint talked about and introduced his newly released book Management on the Mend, a follow up to 2010's On the Mend. Summit attendees received a copy of the book, so they're the first to have a chance to read this important work. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • A Tale of Two Clinics - What I Wish My Primary Care Could Be

    13/06/2015 Duración: 12min

    In American healthcare, there's a growing gap between hospitals and clinics that are being innovative and those who are stuck in the "way it's always been done" mode. For example, innovative primary care clinics are using a combination of better processes and better technology to deliver a patient experience that I wish I could experience. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

  • Jack Dorsey: It's an "Organizational Failure" if the CEO

    29/05/2015 Duración: 06min

    Jack Dorsey is well known among tech circles, as a co-founder of Twitter (he's @Jack) and, now, as the CEO of Square. I'm a frequent Twitter user (I'm @MarkGraban) and I also utilize the Square reader occasionally to sell a book to somebody. I appreciate being able to easily and inexpensively accept a credit card here and there.This interview on the public radio program Marketplace caught my eye (I mean, ear): Jack Dorsey: Twitter co-founder, Square CEO, punk --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support

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