- 10 Common Misconceptions About Lean Manufacturing
- Ten Reasons Why One Piece Flow Will Not Work
- The Best Visual Control in the World
- Give Me 60 Minutes and I'll Give You a Lean Transformation
- Toyota Owes Grandpa Ford
- Look Up from Your Work and Ask: ;Could We Flow This?
- Ouch! Change Hurts
- E-mail 5S
- The Top 5 Reasons for Using Production Preparation Process (3P)
- You've Gotta Go to Gemba More Often Than That!
- 5S Your Desk: And Other Tips for Office Productivity
- Skill Matrix Enables Suggestion System
- Work Content for Line Leads
- Strong Supervision: The Key to Long-term Kaizen
- The Four Elements for Sustaining Kaizen
- Keys to Sustaining 5S
- Top 10 Improvement Tools Named After Lean Sensei
- Intuition, Information and the Toyota Production System
- Nine Rules for Fighting Endless Meetings
Taiichi Ohno's Revolution of AwarenessVery early in the book Taiichi Ohno's Workplace Management the architect of the Toyota Production System calls for "a revolution of awareness". He proceeds to talk about misconceptions and false beliefs of various types that people have, as he tells stories and explains parts of the Toyota system. Although the idea of a revolution of awareness is easy to agree with, what is it specifically? A higher degree of sensitivity to waste? A denial of managing by economies of scale? A new way of leading through Socratic questioning and teaching through experimentation, rather than command and control? Ohno does not spell it out, he just says that a revolution of awareness is needed. Here Ohno is playing the game of wits with us, making us think with him, because our wits don't work until we feel the squeeze. I came across this quote today and thought it was most appropriate, and at least a partial answer to the question of what is Taiichi Ohno's revolution of awareness: Problems cannot be solved at the same level of awareness that created them. - Albert Einstein, Scientist By Jon Miller - June 25, 2007 8:56 PM |









