Seven Essential Qualities of a Lean LeaderBy Jon Miller | Post Date: October 11, 2009 12:32 PM | Comments: 7
P is for Perspective. Just as in art or geometry, in leadership perspective we need length and width and depth. The lean leader should hold a long-term perspective and guide their organization to make decisions that are in their best interests over the long haul. This first hurdle is often the highest for companies driven by quarterly earnings. Luckily having width of perspective, the system view rather than a local view, tends to require and reinforce long-term thinking. It is nearly impossible to bring lasting change across a supply chain or the extended enterprise without taking a long-term view. The depth of perspective requires the leader to be curious enough to go see, listen, connect with people and learn about the work in detail. While a leader may not gain depth across the entire breadth of the business in a short time, even making a visible effort sets an example for everyone they lead. A lean leader sees beyond their own horizon, is aware of the larger impact of our actions, and thinks in terms of total costs. R is for Responsibility. In a society where we award leaders with authority, rights, and privilege more than responsibility, this is another difficult hurdle. Many leaders have exhibited a high degree of personal responsibility to gain their position. Few leaders and their organizations succeed without a high degree of customer awareness and responsibility. Yet the further an organization moves from interacting directly with customers, the weaker the sense of responsibility, and this risk is most evident in government bureaucracy, internal customer relationships, and the recent fiasco of financial service organizations. Therefore lean leaders need the quality of strong responsibility for the third type, social responsibility, in order to earning lasting results and respect. With proper perspective, responsibility openness should come a sense of urgency. A combination of flexibility, a strong sense of purpose and the ability to work through people will enable the leader's vision. S is for Self-knowledge. A person who possesses and is guided by these seven essential qualities will guide their people towards profits. Jon, great essential qualities for lean leaders. Great to read that you specifically called out 2-way communications, not just communications. Leaders need to listen as well as talk. And as someone told me long ago, blessed are the flexible because they never get bent out of shape. Poster: Liz Guthridge, The LEAN Communicator | Post Date: October 12, 2009 3:36 PM Jon- great post. I like the use of the acrynom. In sticking with your theme there is one I would add, Passion. That is a passion for lean. Without this there will be no energy to fuel the change engine. Enthusiasm; intensity about a subject; willingness to engage others on their terms with respect to the threats and possibilities; deep knowledge about the subject; examples from one's own experience are all marks of passion. These attributes can be studied, learned, and acquired over time. They grow from believing there is a better way of doing things. Lean leaders must bring this quality to ensure sucessful, sustainable change in their organization. Tim McMahon Poster: Tim McMahon | Post Date: October 13, 2009 5:07 AM Yes, I am! Poster: Marco | Post Date: October 13, 2009 8:59 AM Great article and comments. My personal reminder on the same topic is, "Are you the cause or the affect of what is happening in the organization?" Poster: Tom Leatherby | Post Date: October 13, 2009 10:45 AM Jon; I could not agree more with your analysis. The "constancy of purpose" is one that really sticks out to me. Why do we do what we do? Real leaders lead, while engaging and influencing others towards the benefit of the culture change and with great humility. Those who are effectively leading lean appear to have moved beyond the boundaries of a "what about me" society. Great post and reminder on leadership. Poster: Rick Foreman | Post Date: October 13, 2009 1:48 PM Thanks for all of your comments. I thought the "profits" acronym might have been a bit cheesy. I'm glad you liked it. Poster: Jon Miller | Post Date: October 13, 2009 3:32 PM |





Great post. I like to purposefully misspell responsibility as response-ability. We have the ability to choose our response. We can ask 5 why's or we can ask 5 who's. We can complain or take action. We can blame others or take the hit. We are not fully programmed animals, we can choose our response to the things that happen around us. How will you choose? -jamie flinchbaugh