What is Kaizen? The Little GearBy Jon Miller | Post Date: September 3, 2009 12:11 AM | Comments: 2
Somewhere within this website and others there are definition, explanations and examples of kaizen. Today I'm in a more reflective mood.
The left character above is KAI. It means to change something, like you would remodel your house or reorganize your government. It also means to renew. The right character is ZEN and it does not mean to meditate and bliss out contemplating the all-ness of nothing or the nothingness of all. Sorry. I've disappointed a few people with that news. It means simply "good" but in a fairly deep, semi-religious way. Not like "That pear was good. May I have another?" Rather, "All it takes for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing" kind of good. So if you want to put them together and say "improvement" or "continuous improvement" that's fine. In common usage Japanese, the word means that. When applied to how some leading organizations are using kaizen to transform their business and enable people to improve their lives through it, the meaning is something more. Kaizen is practice, repetition, the development of a mindset through habitual work. It's the small gear that is easy to turn, and by repeated turning of that small gear we can do bigger things. When we try to move the big gears right away, sometimes we fail and think we can't, when we only need persistence, and a bit of leverage. We want the answer, the solution, the big improvement so we act on leaps of insight and invention, falling in love with our idea. Then the idea turns out to be not so good and we either blindly defend it, we give up on it, or we can turn the little gear again. Kaizen is about taking away what isn't working and trying something else. No matter how small that effort, the important thing is to make it. A minor adjustment to the position of the cushion between between your back and your reading chair, that's kaizen. Switching off a light, an appliance or being more mindful about how we drive, these things are kaizen. A brief walk to stretch the legs each day, a friendly word to a neighbor each day, small decisions based less on selfishness and more on long-term benefits for all, these are kaizen. Whatever small changes that propel us towards being good, whatever gives us the courage to try something a bit more audacious tomorrow, whatever action speaks louder than doubting thoughts or words, it's all kaizen. Dear Jon, Poster: John Santomer | Post Date: September 7, 2009 6:46 AM |






"change and be good" very appropriate for the Kaizen