Lean Blog Interviews - Healthcare, Manufacturing, Business, and Leadership
Business:Management
Episode page with transcript and more
My guest for Episode #484 of the Lean Blog Interviews Podcast is Keith Ingels, who previously joined us in Episode 390. He's the RLM Manager of Solutions & Support Centers — RLM being the Raymond Lean Management system.
He was also a guest with me for Episode 62 of “My Favorite Mistake.” His story and insights were also featured in Chapter 8 of my book, The Mistakes That Make Us: Cultivating a Culture of Learning and Innovation.
In today's episode, we discuss how the Raymond Corporation makes Lean / TPS their own management system, even while being under the Toyota corporate umbrella. RLM focuses on developing people and that starts with leaders. Why does a culture of continuous improvement start with small steps and not requiring ROI calculations for every improvement? We discuss how kaizen participation rates are a leading indicator of employee morale and how absenteeism and turnover are lagging indicators. We talk about that and more…
“Critique the process, not the people.”
Questions, Notes, and Highlights:The podcast is sponsored by Stiles Associates, now in its 30th year of business. They are the go-to Lean recruiting firm serving the manufacturing, private equity, and healthcare industries. Learn more.
This podcast was also brought to you by Arena, a PTC Business. Arena is the proven market leader in Cloud Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) with over 1,400 customers worldwide. Visit the link arenasolutions.com/lean to learn more about how Arena can help speed product releases with one connected system.
This podcast is part of the #LeanCommunicators network.
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Bob Emiliani on ’Real Lean’ and the Black Art of Lean Leadership
Norman Bodek Discussing His 68th Trip to Japan *
Dean Bliss, Lean at the Iowa Health System
Gwendolyn Galsworth, “Visual Displays”
Ralph Keller - the Association for Manufacturing Excellence
Mike Micklewright, "What Would Deming Say?"
Martin Hinckley on Lean and Mistake-Proofing*
Jeff Liker on His Book Toyota Culture, Part 3 of 3
An Anonymous UAW Retiree Who is a Passionate Fan of Lean & TPS
Jeff Liker on His Book Toyota Culture, Part 2 of 3
Bob Emiliani on Practical Lean Leadership
Jeff Liker on his Book Toyota Culture, Part 1 of 3
Norm Bodek on the New Shingo Book, ’Kaizen and the Art of Creative Thinking’ *
Former Toyota Leader David Meier, on Toyota Talent (Again)
Former Toyota Leader Chris Harris Discussing Lean Workforces
Jim Huntzinger, Trends in Lean Accounting and the Summit
Norman Bodek on His Most Recent Lean Study Trip to Japan *
David Meier on ’Toyota Talent,’ Standardization, and the San Antonio Plant *
Bob Emiliani: An Update on What Happened with Lean at Wiremold *