Lean IT
Lean IT
Lean IT
A great read on how to apply Lean principles to IT. These tools really work to improve ITs performance and credibility.
Niel Nickolaisen, CIO Headwaters, Inc.; co-author of Stand
Back and Deliver: Accelerating Business Agility
A groundbreaking synthesis, examining IT operations, project management, software development, and governance through a Lean lens. Taut, subtly reasoned, and laced with the kind of
brilliant insights that only come from practicing masters. Required reading for IT executives, architects, and project managers.
Charles Betz, author of Architecture and Patterns for IT Service Management,
Resource Planning, and Governance, and practicing Fortune 20 enterprise architect
A superb primer for anyone interested in learning about Lean. Their work will help business leaders understand the arcane machinations of IT while giving IT professionals a common language to
talk to the business.
David Almond, Administrator, Office of Transformation for the Department
of Administrative Services; former CIO, Oregon Department of Revenue
Do most IT organizations waste effort? They do. Can this book transform your thinking and
jumpstart your efforts to eliminate waste and optimize the business value of IT? You bet!
Kurt Milne, Executive Director, IT Process Institute
Finally! A practical Lean transformation blueprint that includes information systems and the IT
organization, while addressing the essential element of human engagement across the enterprise.
You can easily digest their lessons and learn how to adapt and apply to your specific organization.
This is the key to business alignment the IT industry has been searching for.
Andrew Rome, Talent & Organizational Performance executive
of an 80,000-person global IT Management firm
A deft application of Lean concepts and techniques to a central challenge we all face: how to
increase effectiveness of investments in IT people and systems and the value they bring to enterprise
processes. Current and aspiring business and IT leaders and managers at all levels of the organization will benefit from their in-depth knowledge and broad perspective.
John Pierce, Vice President, Information Systems, Tripwire, Inc.
Lean IT is an idea whose time has come, especially now that applications like electronic medical
records may soon revolutionize health care. Bell and Orzen blend creativity and practicality as they
show how to improve both information quality and easeall the while acknowledging that more is
not always better.
Naida Grunden, Author, The Pittsburgh Way to Efficient Healthcare:
Improving Patient Care Using Toyota Based Methods
This book is long overdue. The IT world needs tools and concepts to be structured in their language
and approach so they can join the productivity push that manufacturing has already experienced.
Bill Baker, co-author, Winning the Knowledge Transfer Race
This book is a must read for not only IT professionals, but business executives as it aligns information and information systems throughout the enterprise and supply chain, which improves organizational performance and agility.
Beth Cudney, Ph.D., Missouri University of Science and Technology;
author of Using Hoshin Kanri to Improve the Value Stream
This work integrates the Lean work over the past century and brings it to focus on the IT organization to eradicate the very drivers of IT wastes, replacing them with a value driven approach based
on Lean principles. This comprehensive book should be required reading for all levels in the IT
organization.
Mark Swets and Tim Schipper, Lean Coaches, Steelcase;
co-authors of Innovative Lean Development
From software development to help desk management, business leaders, IT professionals, and
improvement teams finally have clear and concise answers to the question, Yes, but, how does Lean
apply to IT? Supported by compelling case studies, this outstanding book goes far beyond theory.
Karen Martin, co-author of The Kaizen Event Planner: Achieving Rapid
Improvement in Office, Service, and Technical Environments
Lean IT takes the game to a new level, particularly in the field of Lean Healthcare, where effective
information systems are vital. I suppose I will have to buy multiple copies of this book -- So many
IT managers in need of Lean education; so little time.
Tom Jackson, author of Hoshin Kanri for the Lean Enterprise: Developing Competitive
Capabilities and Managing Profit, winner of the 2007 Shingo Research Prize
Read it! Learn it! Do it! These pages are meant to be dog-eared, high-lighted, and coffee-stained.
Within these pages are the keys to unlocking the value of information and information systems.
Dennis E. Wells, Lean Evangelist, Oregon Department of Human Services
The authors clearly articulate and demystify the overwhelming challenge of enabling IT processes
and organizations to embrace rapid change demanded by Lean transformation. Lean IT represents
an important body of work Lean practitioners desperately need to break through the plateau of
unending point improvements into sustainable system wide improvements impacting the bottom
line.
Rajesh Solanki, Corporate Director for Continuous
Improvement, RTI International Metals, Inc
Nearly every week, IT leaders ask me to help clarify their roles in their organizations process
improvement efforts. This book not only answers how and why, it also gives great examples showing
that it can be done in your organization too!
Steve Hoeft, Lean Six Sigma Director, Altarum Institute; Lead Instructor,
Univ. of Michigan Lean Manufacturing, Lean Product Design and Lean
Healthcare Certification courses; and author of Stories From My Sensei.
The gap from the implementation of Lean in production processes to office practices now has a
bridge! Orzen and Bell are visionary showing the value of a fully integrated lean enterprise.
Elizabeth M. King, Executive Director Organizational Effectiveness, ESCO
Corporation; Association for Manufacturing Excellence, Director
Lean IT
Enabling and Sustaining
Your Lean Transformation
Productivity Press
Taylor & Francis Group
270 Madison Avenue
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2011 by Steven C. Bell and Michael A. Orzen
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This book is dedicated to Morton and Rickie Orzen, and Bob and Betty Bell,
our incredible parents who molded us with their unconditional love.
We also dedicate the concepts and practices within this book to the countless dedicated community volunteers, and aid workers with nonprofit and
nongovernmental organizations around the world. We believe that Lean IT
not only offers benefits to the industrialized countries, but to the billions of
individuals in this world living at the bottom of the pyramid, who must do
more with much less. We hope that Lean IT can help these compassionate
individuals to harness the power and breadth of low-cost information technologies to raise the standard and quality of living for all.
Introduction
Foundation:
What Is Lean IT and Why Is It Important?
Integration: Aligning
Lean IT and the Business
,,,
Performance: IT
Operational Excellence
7. Lean IT Operations:
ITIL and Cloud Computing
8. Lean Software
Development
6. Lean Management
Systems
9. Applying Lean to
Project Management
,9
Leadership Roadmap
10. Leading the Lean IT Transformation
11. A Lean IT Roadmap
Contents
Acknowledgments................................................................................. xv
Introduction.........................................................................................xvii
Section I Foundation
What Is Lean IT and Why Is it Important?
Chapter 1 Why Does Lean IT Matter?................................................ 3
The Business View........................................................................3
The IT View...................................................................................5
What Causes IT and Business Misalignment?.........................6
How Lean IT Encourages Alignment and Creates Value.......8
Moving Forward.........................................................................10
Endnotes......................................................................................11
Chapter 2 Foundations of Lean......................................................... 13
A Brief History of Continuous Improvement........................13
The Age of Scientific Management: 18901940.................13
The Age of Engagement: 19401995...................................14
The Age of Integration: 1996Present................................15
Lean Principles...........................................................................16
Constancy of Purpose...........................................................17
Respect for People..................................................................21
Continuous Improvement and the Pursuit of
Perfection................................................................................22
Proactive Behavior.................................................................24
Voice of the Customer...........................................................26
Quality at the Source.............................................................27
Systems Thinking..................................................................27
Flow, Pull, and Just in Time.................................................29
Culture................................................................................... 30
The Central Concepts of Value and Waste.............................33
vii
viii Contents
Value Stream..........................................................................33
Value........................................................................................33
Value-Added Work: VA, NVA, and NNVA................. 34
The Three Ms......................................................................... 34
Unevenness: Mura........................................................... 34
Overburden: Muri............................................................ 34
Waste: Muda......................................................................35
The Power of the Three Ms..............................................36
Lean Tools Overview.................................................................36
A3 Thinking, the Scientific Method, and PDCA..............36
Value Stream Mapping.........................................................37
Kaizen..................................................................................... 40
System and Process Kaizen............................................ 40
Kaizen Events, Projects and Daily Improvement.........41
Kaikaku.................................................................................. 42
Standardized Work............................................................... 42
5S and the Visual Workplace.............................................. 43
Lets Get Started!....................................................................... 43
Endnotes..................................................................................... 44
Chapter 3 The Lean IT and Business Partnership........................... 45
Why Hasnt IT Been a Focus of Lean?.................................... 46
What Is ITs Burning Platform for Transformation?........... 48
Lean versus Traditional IT: A Natural Tension?...............49
Legacy Systems.......................................................................50
What about Process Maturity Models?..............................51
What Is Information Waste?.....................................................52
Excess Information Inventory Waste..................................53
Information Overprocessing Waste................................... 54
Poor Data Quality Waste......................................................55
Learning to See Information Waste.........................................55
Health Care Information Quality........................................... 56
Lean and Green IT.....................................................................61
The Tools of Lean IT..................................................................63
How Do We Do Lean IT?..........................................................65
Endnotes..................................................................................... 66
Contents ix
Section II Integration
Aligning Lean IT and the Business
Chapter 4 Lean IT and Business Process Improvement.................. 69
Chapter Objectives.....................................................................69
The Coordinating Function of Information, IT, and
the Lean Office............................................................................70
The Intangible Nature of Information Value and Waste......74
IT Brings Systems Perspective to Business Process
Improvement..........................................................................75
Enterprise Software Applications and the Ghosts of
Projects Past...........................................................................77
The EfficiencyFlexibility Trade-Off: Agility....................79
Process versus Practice........................................................ 80
What Processes and Practices Are Best?.............................82
Benchmarking: No Need to Reinvent the Wheel..................83
Using Measurement Effectively................................................85
Compliance: A Special Form of Measurement..................87
Business Process Management (BPM)................................... 88
Prioritizing Process Improvement with Strategy................. 90
Supporting Processes........................................................... 90
Innovating Processes.............................................................92
The IT Organizations Contribution........................................93
Endnotes......................................................................................95
Chapter 5 Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean
Manufacturing: Flow and Pull......................................... 97
Chapter Objectives.....................................................................97
Push versus Pull: What Went Wrong with MRP?.............. 100
Flow, Balance, and Agility.......................................................102
Kanban Is an Information System for Pull............................104
Creating a Level Schedule.......................................................107
IT Demand Management: The Foundation for Flow..........109
Only Three Choices When Demand Exceeds Capacity.111
The IT Demand Management Cycle.................................112
Demand Planning...........................................................112
x Contents
Flow Simplifies Demand Planning...............................114
Capacity Planning...........................................................115
Balancing.........................................................................116
Executive Review............................................................117
Lean IT Lessons Learned from the Shop Floor....................118
Endnotes....................................................................................119
Chapter 6 Lean Management Systems............................................ 121
Communication....................................................................... 123
Knowledge Management and Collaboration....................... 124
Knowledge Management....................................................125
Collaborative Workspaces..................................................127
The Evolution of a Lean Intranet Site................................... 128
IT Service Desk (Help Desk)..............................................129
Education and Training......................................................130
Performance Measurement.....................................................131
Lean Business Intelligence.................................................133
Rapid Acquisition and Integration....................................135
Strategy Deployment................................................................136
The Role of Information Systems in Strategy
Deployment..........................................................................139
Measuring Value: Lean Accounting......................................140
Focus on Creating Value, Not Cost Reduction....................143
The Importance of the Lean Management System..............144
Endnotes....................................................................................145
Contents xi
How ITIL Supports Lean IT...............................................160
A3 Problem Solving........................................................160
Voice of the Customer....................................................160
Lean Thinking Applied to Security and License
Management...................................................................161
Quality at the Source......................................................162
Standard Work................................................................162
Measurement...................................................................163
Lean IT in the Cloud................................................................164
Lean Tips for Successful IT Services Adoption....................165
Endnotes....................................................................................168
Chapter 8 Lean Software Development........................................... 169
The Challenges of Traditional Software Development........171
Lean Software Development Basics.......................................174
Lean Software Development Life Cycle.................................177
Organization and Approach..............................................177
Requirements Definition....................................................178
Demand Management........................................................181
Execution and Test Iterations............................................183
Customer Service and Support..........................................186
Measurements......................................................................187
Implementation and Integration Lessons Learned.............189
Endnotes....................................................................................191
Chapter 9 Applying Lean to Project Management..................... 193
The Value of Effective Project Management.........................193
The Project Management Body of Knowledge................197
Portfolio Management........................................................197
Program Management........................................................198
The Project Management Office...................................198
Is Lean a Program?...................................................................199
Project Management.......................................................... 200
The Disconnect between Strategy and Execution:
The Role of the PMO................................................................201
xii Contents
Improving Project Management Results with Lean
Thinking.............................................................................. 203
Lean Project Management..................................................... 206
The Triple Constraints Model........................................... 206
Applying Lean Thinking to Project Management......... 207
A3 Thinking................................................................... 208
Value Stream Mapping...................................................212
Plan-Do-Check-Act, DMAIC, and Project
Management.........................................................................213
Initiate..............................................................................213
Plan...................................................................................215
The Five Whys...........................................................................217
The Fishbone Diagram............................................................217
Execute.............................................................................219
Monitor and Control..................................................... 220
Close.................................................................................221
Lean Project Management Enables the Lean Enterprise... 222
Endnotes................................................................................... 223
Contents xiii
Chapter 11 A Lean IT Roadmap.................................................... 249
People Lead Lean IT Change................................................. 249
How to Start the Lean IT Transformation............................252
Lean IT Transformation Roadmap........................................253
Strategy..................................................................................... 254
Establish Leadership Vision and Consensus.................. 254
Articulate Strategic Intent and Drivers........................... 256
Planning.................................................................................... 256
Define and Communicate the Transformation Plan..... 256
ITs Stop-Doing List.................................................................257
Build a Lean Leadership Team......................................... 258
Create a Basic Toolkit..........................................................259
Assess Key Enterprise Value Streams...............................259
Execution.................................................................................. 260
Launch Pilot Kaizen Projects............................................ 260
Invest in Enterprise-Wide Infrastructure....................... 260
Measure Results and Assess Understanding and
Buy-In................................................................................... 260
Who Goes First?.......................................................................261
Consolidate Gains and Build Momentum...................... 262
Setting the Pace for Change . ................................................ 264
Endnotes................................................................................... 266
xiv Contents
Virginia Mason Medical Center: Laboratory Order
Process and System Improvement.........................................301
Appendix A: A Brief History of Continuous Improvement............. 307
Appendix B: How Lean and Six Sigma Work Together.................... 313
Focus..........................................................................................315
Roles...........................................................................................315
Project Size and Duration.......................................................316
Project Selection.......................................................................316
Complementary Coexistence..................................................317
Appendix C: Information Wastes....................................................... 319
Appendix D: IT Service Desk A3 Example........................................ 329
Index..................................................................................................... 333
About the Authors............................................................................... 349
Acknowledgments
This book was born from our realization of the pressing need to effectively apply Lean thinking to information and information systems. We
are grateful to the many people who provoked, challenged, and elevated
our understanding of this fascinating and diverse subject. This book is
a collection of experiences, lessons learned, and insights from the many
people we have had the privilege of working with over the past 20 years.
Throughout this book, our friend, client, and colleague, Richard Carroll,
has provided thoughtful feedback and, at times, very challenging reviews.
His professional experience and insights inspired us to stress the practical
application of many of the central themes in this book.
Our appreciation also goes to those individuals and organizations who
supported us along the way. These include Jim Womack, Helen Zak, and
Mark Graban at the Lean Enterprise Institute; Jake Raymer and Bob
Miller at The Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence; and Dan Miklovic
at Gartner.
Special thanks for the contribution and support we received from Scott
Alldridge, Dave Almond, Scott Ambler, Valerie Arraj, Bill Baker, Jackie
Barretta, John Bernard, Charlie Betz, John Bicheno, Aaron Brown, Stevie
Campion, Steve Castellanos, Tim Costello, Phil Coy, Beth Cudney, Toni
Doolen, Susan Duke, Troy DuMoulin, Ron Durham, Martin Erb, Dennis
Feagin, Russell Field, Gwendolyn Galsworth, Manoj Garg, Naida Grunden,
Lance Harris, Darren Hogg, Steve Hoeft, Nathan Holt, John Houlihan, Paul
Imai, Ed Israel, Tom Jackson, Gene Kim, Elizabeth King, Susan Kirchoff,
Dr. David Labby, Rick Lemieux, David Mann, Karen Martin, Brian Maskell,
Kurt Milne, Niel Nickolaisen, Debbie Nightingale, Tom Perry, John Pierce,
Travis Pierce, Tom and Mary Poppendieck, Carol Powers, John Price, Jack
ReVelle, Patrick Roach, Andrew Rome, Terry Ross, Brandon Ruggles, Joe
Rutz, James Scott, James Serazio, Praveen Sharabu, Bill Siemering, Rajesh
Solanki, Damon Stoddard, Pete Stofle, Tom Vest, Mike Wegener, Brian
Wellinghoff, Dennis Wells, Brett Wills, Dave Wilson, Stephen Wilson,
and Colleen Young. Wed also like to thank Aurelia Navarro and Caralee
Anley-Casares for their outstanding editing and coaching skills.
xv
xvi Acknowledgments
We are deeply in debt to those individuals and organizations who
invested the time and patience to write, in their own words, actual case
studies that illustrate real-world examples of the power of Lean IT.
These include Brian Wellinghoff, Barry-Wehmiller; Richard Carroll and
Aaron Brown, Con-way; Mike Manis and Bill Siemering, Group Health;
Rajesh Solanki, Bill Kemerer, and Brent White, Ingersoll Rand Security
Technologies; Mark Swets and Tim Schipper, Steelcase; John Houlihan
and James Scott, Toyota Australia; Lee Darrow, John Eusek, and David
Krause, Virginia Mason Medical Center.
And to the hundreds, or perhaps thousands, of individuals not listed
here, with whom we have interacted over the past years during consulting,
teaching, workshops, conferences, and research, we are grateful. Together
we are forging ahead in a collaborative journey of discovery, learning, and
knowledge sharing, as we collectively develop this new body of knowledge
around Lean IT.
Finally, our heartfelt appreciation and admiration go to our wives, Karen
and Lynda, who endured the many challenges that often accompany projects such as this. Your tireless faith, support, patience, understanding,
acceptance, and love have helped us to become the people we are today.
Introduction
Todays IT organization faces a clear imperative: reduce costs while improving service levels. At the same time, it must assume an active leadership
role to drive changecontinuous improvement, innovation, and agility
throughout the enterprise, enabling efficient yet flexible business processes
that create value and establish preference in the eyes of each customer.
How can these potentially competing objectives be satisfied with limited
resources? For the answer, we turn to the lessons learned from Lean, which
emerged in manufacturing during the 1950s and has since been embraced
across every industry. It is now the time for IT to adopt Lean thinking as
well.
This is the first definitive and comprehensive text on the Lean IT body of
knowledge, demonstrating how the various aspects of Lean can be applied
to the continuous improvement of information and information systems
in order to enable and sustain the Lean enterprise. Written by Lean IT
pioneers Steve Bell and Mike Orzen, this book distills over 40 years of
experience in applying Lean principles, systems, and tools to information
technology across many industries.
This book was written to help youwhether you are a business executive, manager, IT professional, or member of an improvement teamto
proactively improve, integrate, align, and synchronize information and
information systems to enable breakthrough performance and agility.
xviii Introduction
The answer to all these questions is yes. But Lean IT is much more than
just a set of tools and practices; it is a deep behavioral and cultural transformation that encourages everyone in the organization to think differently about the role of quality information in the creation and delivery
of value to the customer. Lean IT enables the IT organization to reach
beyond alignment toward fundamental integration, cultivating an inseparable, collaborative partnership with the business.
Whether you are new to Lean, or a seasoned veteran, in this book you
will find new insights into the power of Lean and the critical impact of an
integrated IT function. In this book, Bell and Orzen explore all aspects of
Lean IT within two primary dimensions:
1. Outward-facing Lean IT: Engaging information, information systems, and the IT organization in partnership with the business to
continuously improve and innovate business processes and management systems
2. Inward-facing Lean IT: Helping the IT organization achieve operational excellence, applying the principles and tools of continuous
improvement to IT operations, services, software development, and
projects
These two dimensions are not separate but complementary, two sides of
the same coin. They serve the ultimate objective of Lean transformation:
creating value for the enterprise and its customers.
We begin in Part 1 by exploring the foundations of Lean, and how they
apply to information, information systems, and the IT organization. Part
2 then explores the various outward-facing aspects of Lean IT applied to
business process improvement, supported by an effective Lean management system that links strategy with daily work. Part 3 explores inwardfacing issues: how Lean IT improves the performance of IT operations
and services, software development, and project management, while considering the implications of a shift toward cloud computing. Part 4 brings
it all together, with a comprehensive perspective on Lean management
and governance, offering a Lean IT roadmap to help readers on their own
transformation journey.
The book concludes with case studies from several Lean leaders: BarryWehmiller, Con-way, Group Health, Ingersoll Rand, Steelcase, Toyota,
and Virginia Mason Medical Center. Each offers, in their own words, a
Introduction xix
practical example of how Lean IT can enable and sustain the Lean enterprise transformation.
An ancient proverb says that the best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago.
The next best time is right now. So lets get started.
Section I
Foundation
What Is Lean IT and
Why Is it Important?
1
Why Does Lean IT Matter?
Quality information and effective information systems are vital to the success
of the modern enterprise. But the magnitude of IT spending on ill-conceived
or poorly implemented IT projects is staggering. And the dire consequences
of unstable and inflexible systems, failed projects, and chronic misalignment
of IT activities with business strategy are unacceptableand unsustainable.
The portion of the global economy spent on IT is substantial. For example, banking and finance enterprises in 2008 spent an average of 6.9 percent of their revenue on IT; this figure is a staggering 4.7 percent in health
care.1 If you begin with a conservative assumption that just 20 percent of
these investments do not add significant value to the customer, the numbers add up quickly. And beyond the direct waste of IT dollars spent that
dont return expected benefits, even more staggering are the consequences
of poor-quality information and ineffective information systems on the
productivity and general health of each organization, and by extension to
the global economy as a whole.
Much is at stake hereclearly IT and the business must significantly
improve the way they work together toward shared outcomes if theyre
going to produce ongoing order-of-magnitude improvement. Aligning IT
with the business has become an all-too-familiar slogan. But what does
alignment really mean? And what are the consequences when alignment is
lacking? Lets hear from both sides.
The IT View
Now lets consider the other perspective: the IT organization is often
overloaded, and reactive crisis management behavior is all too common.
Constant change, shifting priorities, new releases and upgrades, and the
need to balance existing and emerging technologies, all contribute to an
untenable mixture of complexity and volatility. There is usually more
work than IT could ever complete; some companies report three to fiveyear backlogs. And through it all, IT is tasked with keeping information
systems, and the business, up and running at all times, while rigorously
controlling costs. This often creates the atmosphere of a no-win scenario
within IT.
Common IT concerns and challenges include:
Endless firefighting: The amount of unplanned work often exceeds
planned work, which is unsatisfying, exhausting, and ultimately
not sustainable.
Unclear system requirements: End users cant always articulate what
they want and often ask for more than they need.
Conflicting priorities: Business stakeholders are often unable to agree
on priorities, so IT is caught in the middle with unclear goals, budgets, and timelines, having no choice but to pragmatically make
important priority decisions based on incomplete information.
Lack of engagement: IT is often brought into projects after important
strategic and tactical business decisions have already been made.
Resource thrashing: Due to unpredictable demand, magnified by
unclear and shifting priorities, IT staff are frequently switched
between projects, causing changeover costs, lost productivity, quality problems, frustration, and fatigue.
Excessive automation: Rather than eliminating or at least simplifying wasteful processes, they are often automated, creating additional
layers of system complexity and increasing total cost of ownership.
Poor data quality: This creates additional errors, rework, and
other downstream consequences, and is often caused by lack of
end user training and documentation, and inadequate process
design and controls.
Moving Forward
For many years, Gartner (a global IT research firm) has been asking chief
information officers (CIOs) to identify their top priorities. As you can
see in Figure1.1, businesses want IT to drive growth and value through
alignment. But now, in the increasingly fast-paced and competitive global
economy, organizations are turning to the IT organization as partners in
change leadership.
Information, information systems, and the IT organization are tightly
interwoven within the fabric of virtually every business process of the
modern organization. IT does matter in the never-ending, always changing race for competitive advantage.
This is especially true as many IT infrastructure and commodity services shift to a scalable, low-cost, cloud-computing model. In this approach
to information systems delivery, with utility-based infrastructure and service-based applications, the business will begin paying for functional utility rather than infrastructure. This will shift a significant portion of annual
IT funding from the capital budget to variable expenditures, potentially
making each investment decision more aligned with the business process
it serves. Along with this shift, the business will expect change capability
Top 3 CIO Priorities
Delivering projects that enable business growth
Linking business and IT strategies and plans
Leading enterprise change initiatives
Reducing the cost of IT
Building business skills in the IT organization
Figure1.1
2006
1
2
2009
3
1
2
2012
1
2
3
Endnotes
* Note to the reader: The introduction of Lean is chiefly attributed to the Toyota Production System,
which emerged in post World War II Japanfor a more comprehensive timeline of continuous
improvement evolution see Chapter 2. At the time of this publication, Toyota is under intense
public scrutiny for quality and safety concerns. In late 2009, just as this issue found its way into
the public spotlight, the new President, Akio Toyoda, admitted that Toyota had lost their way in
the late 1990s. Their focus on quality and customer satisfaction gave way to ambition for growth,
global market share and profitability. Throughout this book we focus on Lean principles, systems,
and tools that helped Toyota through their 50-year ascendancy in the global auto market. These
same principles and tools have helped many companies in other industries as well. It is clear that
even the venerable Toyota cannot violate their own principles without consequences.
2
Foundations of Lean
Chapter Objectives
To create a shared foundation for our discussion of Lean IT, in this chapter
we will:
Review a brief history of business process improvement, culminating in Lean.
Establish the foundational principles of a lasting transformation of
culture and performance.
Explore the concepts of value and waste in relation to Lean problemsolving tools, concepts, and terminology.
Foundations of Lean 15
terms of dollar savings. With the publication of The Goal by Eli Goldratt in
1992,1 the Theory of Constraints also became popular, demonstrating that
bottlenecks could be exploited to pace production, focus improvement
efforts, and significantly boost throughput. Then in 1990, The Machine
That Changed the World was published by Womack, Jones, and Roos at
MIT.2 This book examined the Toyota Production System and introduced
the term Lean. (For a detailed discussion of how Six Sigma and Lean can
effectively work together, see Appendix B.)
Reengineering the Corporation,3 published in 1993, popularized business process reengineering (BPR) emphasizing process improvement and
encouraging companies to abandon outdated systems, methods, and processes that no longer serve their purpose. While this was well intentioned,
instead of engaging workers, it often was misunderstood and misapplied
to justify downsizing. While the Age of Engagement experimented with
the central idea of engaging people to drive continuous improvement, we
still have a long way to go to achieve Demings vision as too many companies still do not engage the hearts and minds of their people.
Note to the reader: For the remainder of this book, unless otherwise
stated, we will use the term continuous improvement to embody all
improvement disciplines, including Lean, Total Quality Management, Six
Sigma, the Theory of Constraints, and the Toyota Production System.
The Age of Integration: 1996Present
By the mid-1990s, companies around the globe were beginning to apply
Lean, Six Sigma, and other improvement methods beyond the factory
floor to office and administration, supply chain, accounting, and software
development. Nonmanufacturing industries quickly discovered that Lean
manufacturing techniques could produce significant results. Trading
partners were enlisted to develop integrated processes throughout the
supply chain. Advances in computing functionality, speed, and cost
further supported the integration of business systems and communications. In 1996, Lean Thinking4 was published, emphasizing integration of
improvement across value streams, unleashing the current age of integration of improvement methods across all functions of the business, and in
all industries, including health care, insurance, banking, and nonprofits.
For an in-depth discussion of the history of continuous improvement, see
Appendix A. For a timeline of continuous improvement, see Figure2.1.
Taylor, Gilbreth
Scientific Management
Shewhart at
Bell Labs
Statistical
Analysis/
Process
Control
Feigenbaum publishes
Quality Control Principles
Shingo Prize
Total
created
Deming
Quality
Visits Japan
Management
Juran
Visits Japan
1900
Henry Ford
Conveyor Line/
Process Flow
Reengineering the
Corporation published
Lean Thinking
published
2000
1950
Training
Within Industry
Age of Engagement
Six Sigma
Motorola, Allied Signal, GE
Lean Office, Supply Chain,
Health Care, Service
Industries and beyond
Age of Integration
Figure 2.1
Lean Principles
Many companies and individuals implementing Lean make the mistake
of becoming preoccupied with specific tools. When properly applied,
tools are performance enablers, but it is the principles embedded within
the culture of an organization that compel long-term behavioral change.
Without a clear grasp of Lean principles, focus on Lean tools is like sailing a ship without a rudder. Companies that fail to anchor their continuous improvement efforts with principles rather than tools may experience
short-term localized results, but will not achieve the broad acceptance
needed for sustained improvement. The Shingo Prize for Operational
Excellence* emphasizes this primacy of principles over tools:
As organizations begin a Lean transformation, it is usually at the Tools
& Techniques level in specific areas of the organization. Ideally, the Lean
journey then proceeds to the Systems level, creating a more integrated
and sustained improvement model. Eventually all employees throughout
all business processes develop a deeper understanding of principles (the
* In 1988, the Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence was established to acknowledge Shigeo
Shingos contribution to continuous improvement, promote awareness of Lean concepts, and recognize companies that achieve world-class status in Lean manufacturing and business processes.
The philosophy of the Shingo Prize is that world-class performance for quality, cost, and delivery
can be achieved through consistent application of Lean principles and tools in all business processes. See www.shingoprize.org.
Foundations of Lean 17
know why), empowering the organization to develop and deploy specific
methodologies and practices unique to the organization.5
Y
Culture
Flow/Pull/JIT
Quality at
the Source
Voice of
the Customer
Behavior
Foundation
Perspective
A
L
Capstone
Flow
C
O
S
T
T
I
M
E
Systems
Thinking
Proactive Behavior
Constancy
of Purpose
Respect
for People
Pursuit
of Perfection
Figure 2.2
The issue: In many organizations, there is a lack of clarity concerning what matters most. We like to ask various people at our client
sites, What are the goals of the company, and how do they influence your daily work? We typically receive a variety of answers.
Two important issues often become apparent: (1) there is a wide
range of understanding of company goals, and (2) goals are at best
indirectly aligned with the concerns and actions of individuals and
workgroups. This manifests as a lack of coordination within departments and between various functional areas, accompanied by counterproductive or conflicting performance measures and incentives.
Activity is often mistaken for productivity and is not necessarily
effective in supporting the organizations strategy or adding customer value.
How does the principle address this challenge? Constancy of purpose
focuses thinking and behavior, aligning effort and getting everyone
rowing in the same direction. Effective leaders lead by example, a
Foundations of Lean 19
responsibility that cannot be delegated. Management should adopt a
visible and active role in supporting change. As people are encouraged to challenge the way we do things around here and begin to
perceive difficulties as opportunities for improvement, collaborative problem solving, and ownership of process quality starts to take
root.
At this critical time, the way management reacts to setbacks
either reinforces proactive behavior or discourages it. Effective leaders embrace an essential truth: poor processesnot peopleare the
cause of most problems. For most of his career, Deming put forth the
85/15 rule, suggesting that 85 percent of problems were inherent to
process design and not controlled by the people doing the work. He
later revised the estimate to 96 percent.
A clear understanding that Lean is about fixing processes, not people, creates the tone for fact-based improvement. In this atmosphere,
people move out of their comfort zones, and actively seek out problems
as opportunities to make things better. Every successful Lean transformation we have witnessed has been led by a champion who provided the focus, enthusiasm, and drive that inspired others to move
beyond business as usual. This role can be filled by an executive sponsor, a program manager, or any person in your organization who possesses credibility and respect. Early successes inspire others to become
involved and build momentum. Gandhi said it best: Be the change
you wish to see.
To be effective, leadership should be balanced with employee-driven
participation. In a process known as strategy deployment,* leaders establish objectives (top-down) and employees determine how to best accomplish and measure them (bottom-up).
Some organizations often manage in a hierarchal, top-down manner
with management at the top of the pyramid, issuing commands downward. Lean inverts this pyramid, as shown in Figure2.3. At the very top
are customers and business partners, since they define value and create
demand pull signals that trigger work to be performed. Next are the workers, who most frequently interact with those customers, vendors, and
* Strategy deployment (also known as policy deployment, hoshin kanri, and hoshin planning) is a
management system to align daily work with strategy. See Chapter 6.
Associates
Team Leads & Supervisors
Managers
Strategic
Direction
Improvement
Ideas
Senior
Leadership
Figure 2.3
trading partners and are, thus, in the best position to directly identify
those actions that add the most value.
Managements role is to translate and communicate purpose, strategy,
and goals throughout the organization to teams and workers. Prioritization
of improvements and consensus is achieved through a back-and-forth dialogue between management and employees that aligns strategy and action
at each level, reconciling action plans with available resource capacity.
Rather than being told what to do, the people closest to the customer and
the work develop and implement ideas for improvement based on a clear
understanding of how their actions support company objectives.
Summary: Executive leaderships responsibility is to define strategic goals and create a constancy of purpose. Managements role
is to eliminate barriers to success, stabilize processes, and support employees to develop problem-solving skills, so they can take
ownership of their work and assume responsibility for continuous
improvement. When considering potential areas of improvement,
the alternatives are almost endless, so an important enabler of effective leadership is a formal decision-making framework. This establishes clear priorities and ensures consistent choices are made when
selecting improvement projects. Alignment and prioritization are
consistent themes throughout this book, and well revisit constancy
of purpose in Chapter 10.
Foundations of Lean 21
Respect for People
Theme: The second foundation principle is respect for people. All
individuals possess a unique collection of experience and insight,
and can make a distinctive contribution when they participate in
process improvement. Cross-functional problem solving can only
occur when respect for people is consistently applied throughout
all levels of the organization. Respect drives employee development,
encourages participation, and improves supplier, customer, and
community relations.
The issue: When people sense that their input is disregarded or
not respected, they tend to withdraw their support, concern, and
active participation. Even worse, they may become cynical or
even confrontational from having been left out of the dialogue.
If leaders dont engage the people doing the work with genuine
respect, change for the better has little chance of succeeding. This
is because those who have the knowledge and ability to create lasting improvement have no stake in the final outcome. Worse yet,
organizations lose the creativity and innovative potential each
person offers.
How does the principle address this challenge? Respect for people
unlocks personal excellence and creative potential. In a collaborative learning environment, people know their ideas are valued and
appreciated. Those individuals actually doing the work see potential
improvement opportunities at a deeper level than anyone else in the
organization. They hold the insight, understanding, and passion to
add value and drive daily improvement. In some workers, these skills
are dormant from lack of use.
Good leaders tap into this inexhaustible resource by mentoring,
coaching, and collaborating with their associates, seeking their opinions and respecting differing points of view. Lean transformation
requires the input, support, and active participation of everyone in the
organization. Lean organizations cultivate collaborative problem solving where people become scientific thinkers, learning from successes
as well as failing forward from mistakes and setbacks. Questioning the
way weve always done it is not only accepted, but also respected and
positively acknowledged.
Foundations of Lean 23
Lean is perceived as a program or project (with a beginning and an
end point), people may assume it is just another management flavor of the month that will blow over. They may then decide the best
course of action is to keep your head down and ride low in the middle
of the pack until the storm passes. Without active engagement and
constant reinforcement, we naturally fall back on old habits of thinking and behavior.
How does the principle address this challenge? When we collectively
recognize that if we are not improving we are falling behind, our
understanding of daily work undergoes a radical shift. This realization breathes fresh ideas and energy into the organization, inspiring us to continually reinvent ourselves. With a constant focus on
improvement, we avoid falling into patterns of stagnation in our
daily behavior.
In The Fifth Discipline,7 Peter Senge uses the term learning organization
to describe an environment where people continually develop their abilities
to understand complexity and improve shared understanding. Setbacks
and failures are treated as opportunities to reflect and learn. Perhaps
most importantly, learning organizations encourage systems thinking
the ability to comprehend and focus on the whole while understanding
the interrelationship of the parts. Each individual must begin identifying
with the organizations overall purpose and mission as well as individual
department, workgroup, project, and process-level goals. The pursuit of
perfection requires companies to become learning organizations where a
trial-and-discovery method of process improvement is embraced without
fear of reprimand or ridicule.
The pursuit of perfection is often misunderstoodits an aspiration, but
one that is never achieved. Voltaire said, The perfect is the enemy of the
good. With Lean, whether in the factory, the office, or the IT organization, we should avoid over-automating or striving for the hyper-efficiency
of a perfect solutionthese ultimately create waste and rigidity, and
resist further cycles of improvement.
Summary: The endless quest for excellence stimulates everyone in the
organization to make things better. People no longer see a difference
between performing the work they do, improving the work they do,
and improving themselves.
Proactive Behavior
Constancy
of Purpose
Respect
for People
Pursuit
of Perfection
Theme: Building on our foundation, proactive behavior means taking the initiative, assuming personal responsibility for the quality of
our work and work environment. Being proactive means seizing the
opportunity to make a difference every day.
The issue: Why do the vast majority of companies fail to achieve a
sustaining Lean transformation? Perhaps one reason is that many
people in the business world tend to be seasoned firefighters but
poor police officers. Stereotypically, firefighters react to problems*
by rushing into burning buildings and attacking everything that
may be an issue (flames and smoke). They live on adrenaline during periods of intense focus until the crisis passes, and accept (even
sometime enjoy) emergencies as part of normal operations. Police
officers, by contrast, are methodical proactive problem solvers who
walk the beat investigating the current situation to determine root
causes of problems. Their focus is long term, systematic, preventative, and disciplined. They ask lots of questions and shoot only when
necessary.
How does the principle address this challenge? In The 7 Habits of
Highly Effective People, Dr. Stephen Covey introduces a model called
the Time Management Matrix, dividing work into four quadrants
based on importance and urgency. He points out that the highest
value-added work lies in the Important but Not Urgent quadrant,
where proactive planning, prevention, preparation, learning, and
development occur. Unplanned work focuses on issues that are
either Important and Urgent (reactive firefighting) or Not Important
and Urgent (deceptive activities that seem important due to their
urgency). In either case, they steal time and resources that should be
used to proactively address Important but Not Urgent work.
* Our hats go off to real firefighters, some of the bravest and most proactive thinkers we know. In
this example, we are talking about the common label of firefighting as a behavior.
Foundations of Lean 25
Important
Urgent
Not Urgent
Reactive
Proactive
Fire Fighting
Crisis Management
Interruptions
Rework
Lean Thinking
Alignment
Prioritization
Planning, Prevention,
and Preparation
Measurement
Deceptive
Not
Important
Misaligned Objectives
Misunderstood Tasks
Unproductive Meetings
Excessive Email
Interruptions
Non-Value
Added
Work
Figure 2.4
Established culture often reinforces reactive firefighting at the cost of disciplined problem solving. Because firefighting is highly rewarded, some
firefighters become very good arsonists. This unconscious behavior creates a never-ending cycle of interruptions and interventions which introduce more instability. Cultural DNA8 strongly influences organizations
to revert to reactive behavior when problems arrive and the pressure is
on. Ironically, reactive behavior usually introduces waste and creates more
problems than it solvesactually preventing sustained progress.
As shown in Figure2.4, Lean shifts the emphasis away from unplanned
work to proactive continuous improvement. This approach is effective
because it feeds itself: as more time is invested in process improvement
efforts, less unplanned incidents occur, which frees additional time to
work on more proactive improvements.
Summary: Deming described quality as pride of workmanship.
Proactive behavior requires both personal and team pride combined
with discipline. We then take responsibility for solving problems and
strive for quality at the source.
Quality at
the Source
Voice of
the Customer
Systems
Thinking
Proactive Behavior
Constancy
of Purpose
Respect
for People
Pursuit
of Perfection
Theme: Lean thinkers always ask, What does the customer value,
want, and need? By understanding how customers and information
system users define value, they position themselves to begin with the
end in mind.
The issue: It is imperative that organizations develop a clear understanding of what customers care about most. Often they assume they
know what customers desire, and as a result deliver products and
services that fail to address real customer needs.
How does the principle address this challenge? Most processes have
both internal customers who receive work output and external
customers (trading partners and end users) who receive products,
services, and information. To clearly understand the voice of the
customer, you must engage with your customers, whoever they are.
Use customer segmentation, interviews, focus groups, surveys, sales
and service data analysis, and point-of-use observation to develop
critical-to-quality requirements. Then return regularly to the customer to ensure improvements and innovations deliver what the
customer values most.
Summary: Consistently listening to the voice of the customer ensures
you are focusing on the right issues and making improvements that
will be valued by your current and future customers. Understanding
customer needs and desires more clearly than your competition will
Foundations of Lean 27
enable you to be more responsive and agile, creating competitive
advantage and market leadership.
Quality at the Source
Theme: Quality at the source means doing it right the first time,
every time: imperfect work is not sent to the next operation or to the
customer.
The issue: The well fix it later approach is accepted in many organizations due to time pressure, inadequate training, and a lack of
understanding of the entire process. The best time to solve a problem is at the time it occurs because evidence is fresh, workers are
engaged, and it prevents the release of additional defects until the
root cause of the problem is corrected. The focus of daily work should
be producing quality at the source. Solely focusing on quickly working through the backlog results in the same problems reemerging
time and time again. Time-consuming corrections, clarifications,
and completions become necessary when quality is poor, creating
interruptions and delays which increase costs and aggravation.
How does the principle address this challenge? In a Lean environment, there is an obligation to stop and fix problems, and a shared
commitment to avoid passing known defects downstream toward
the customer. By applying standardized work, training, and error
proofing, every effort is made to ensure the problem or defect is prevented the next time. People assume responsibility for the quality of
the work they pass on, regardless of where the problem originated.
This fundamental change in attitude reduces waste and frustration.
More importantly, problems become the evidence used to detect root
causes and prevent their recurrence.
Summary: When quality at the source takes hold, more time is available to do the work customers are paying for, which in turn improves
productivity, cost, quality, and morale.
Systems Thinking
Theme: The third element of awareness is systems thinkingthe
ability to view the interconnected processes that make up the entire
Foundations of Lean 29
Flow, Pull, and Just in Time
Flow
Flow/Pull/JIT
Quality at
the Source
Voice of
the Customer
Systems
Thinking
Proactive Behavior
Constancy
of Purpose
Respect
for People
Pursuit
of Perfection
Theme: The next level of the pyramid focuses on flowthe uninterrupted progression of materials, services, and information. As
Jeffrey Liker emphasizes in The Toyota Way, Flow where you can,
pull where you must.9 Allow work to flow whenever you can; when
flow is interrupted, use pull signals to initiate work.
The issue: Poor flow of work manifests as interruptions, delays, rework,
and cost. Deficient information flow causes even more irregular flow
of materials, work in process, and finished work inventory where it
is common to have too much (overstock) or too little (shortage). In
an office environment, inventory is usually composed of paper and
electronic documents, including e-mail. Work in process is all work
started but not finished plus work queued up for the next process.
As a general rule, the more work in process there is, the less work is
able to flow, and the more slowly work is completed. Work in process
inventory causes congestion, confusion, and delays; hides problems;
must be managed and tracked; often becomes obsolete; and is often
reworked or discarded. This in turn creates further interruptions,
delays, rework, and cost.
How does the principle address the issue? Flow is achieved through
eliminating delays and interruptions throughout the entire value
stream. Value stream mapping is an effective tool for identifying,
quantifying, and eliminating waste. The smooth flow of information produces the transparency and visibility needed to coordinate
efficient flow of work. When information is used to level demand,
Foundations of Lean 31
Q
U
T
O
L
Capstone
C
O
S
T
T
I
M
E
Culture
Flow/Pull/JIT
Quality at
the Source
Voice of
the Customer
Systems
Thinking
Proactive Behavior
Constancy
of Purpose
Respect
for People
Pursuit
of Perfection
Cornerstone
Figure 2.5
WZ/E/W>^
Embedding Principles
into Culture
^z^dD^
dKK>^
Figure 2.6
The evolution of a Lean culture often begins with the adoption of continuous improvement tools, followed by the formation of behavior-driven
systems, guided by shared values and principles. Tools provide structure
and capability, systems* develop common practices and procedures, and
principles provide a foundation which reinforces cultural standards and
daily behaviors. (See Figure 2.6.)11
Its one thing to create a mission statement and clever slogans articulating strategic objectives of the organization, and an entirely different
thing to have a deeply shared vision and constancy of purpose by all
employees. Shared beliefs are reflected in self-created social systems
that become the way we get things done around here. As organizations
evolve, certain behaviors become the norm and are reinforced by daily
actions.
When it is customary for people to take personal responsibility for the
quality of their work, actively solve problems in a collaborative spirit,
and give their very best, the energy and excitement of the workplace are
palpable. The satisfaction of being part of an effective team accomplishing clear objectives is contagious. When actions are aligned with the
principles weve discussed, they reinforce the strategic direction of the
* Systems, in this context, are collections of tools and procedures which form a standard way of
doing things. Examples of Lean systems include kaizen process, A3 thinking, standard work, 5S,
level loading, measurement, the visual workplace, and strategy deployment.
Foundations of Lean 33
organization while creating a constancy of purpose in support of unrelenting improvement.
Summary: Aristotle said over 2,000 years ago, We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit. Shared values
and principles will serve as a compass throughout your Lean journey. Develop a solid foundation of main beliefs that inspire respect,
proactive behavior, innovation, and constant learning, and you will
be well on your way toward sustainable operational excellence.
Overburden (muri in Japanese) represents placing unrealistic workloads on people and equipment, which leads to stress, mistakes, rework,
and poor morale. It is the job of management to remove overburden by
Foundations of Lean 35
making use of work design,* training, standardized work, and demand
management to support a smooth flow of products, services, and
information.
Waste: Muda
Foundations of Lean 37
and results of a problem-solving exercise. A3 is an international paper size
approximately 11 17 inches (297 420 millimeters), suggesting that a
person or team be able to communicate the essential elements of a problem-solving effort summarized on a single sheet of paper.
An A3 can also be employed as a proposal or status report. But the A3
is much more than a form; A3 thinking is a mental framework used to
reinforce the scientific method of solving problems: Plan-Do-Check-Act
(PDCA*). The scientific method is a structured approach to problem solving
which includes observation, development of a tentative description of cause
and effect (hypothesis), prediction, testing, and evaluation. More often
than not, attempts at problem solving lack structure and method. People
naturally jump to solutions, focusing on symptoms instead of root causes,
and failing to fully understand, let alone solve, the problem at hand.
Benefits from applying A3 thinking include fact-based decision making,
consensus building, clearly documented assumptions, defined targets,
faster results, and follow-up to ensure that improvements are sustained.
Although there are many different formats for an A3, the specific form
design is not importantbut the disciplined A3 thinking process is. For
an example of an A3, see Appendix D.
Value Stream Mapping
Many people have experience with process mapping (as shown in
Figure2.7), which provides a detailed view of the tasks and decisions contained in a specific process. While process mapping is very effective at
providing a detailed step-by-step view of a specific procedure, it does not
attempt to capture information about flow, elapsed time, cost, or quality
at the value stream level.
Value stream mapping visually depicts the flow of information, materials, and work across functional silos with an emphasis on quantifying
wastes, including time and quality. As shown in Figure 2.8, however, a
value stream map can also illustrate a lower level of detail. Typically, the
focus is at a more macro level than process mapping and does not include
individual tasks and decisions.
* In healthcare this is commonly known as PDSA, Plan-Do-Study-Act.
For an in-depth example of A3 thinking and PDCA, see John Shook, Managing to learn
(Cambridge, MA: Lean Enterprise Institute, 2008).
Figure 2.7
Start
Service Desk
Initial Routing Process
Covered in
Service
Catalog?
No
Yes
Covered
Service?
End
Close Request
Yes
Acceptance
Create Ticket
Forward to Review
Board Queue
Delivery
Close Request
No
Inform Requestor
Log Service/Close
Ticket
Inform Requestor/
Schedule Work
Days
99.7
57.76
Quality
18.96 Days
NVA
Lead Time
Hrs
1.40
Cycle Time
Figure 2.8
Summary Data
Production
Lead Time
IN
Mins
Quality
80
Production 45 Mins
Lead Time
Cycle Time
Days
Mins
Review Tags
for Category
and Pricing
100
Quality
95
Quality
Send Tags
to Admin.
10
Cycle Time
Production
Lead Time
Days
Pick up and
Driver Makes
Receiving Tag
Production
Lead Time
Receiving Crew
Grades Drums and
Completes Tag
Excel
Share
Point
Mins
100
Mins
100
Mins
Quality
100
Cycle Time
File Tag
Quality
Production 20 Mins
Lead Time
Cycle Time
Confirm in System
Quality
Production
Lead Time 10 Mins
Cycle Time
Scheduled by
Dispatch
Scheduling Program
SAP
Mins
100
Mins
100
Mins
Quality
100
Production 50 Mins
Lead Time
Cycle Time
Quality
Production 20 Mins
Lead Time
Cycle Time
Update Inventory
Batch Size 5
Quality
Cycle Time
Mins
100
Mins
100
Quality
Production
Lead Time
Cycle Time
100
Hrs
Mins
Sort by Location
Quality
Production 15 Mins
Lead Time
Cycle Time
POST
IN
11
FAX
Quality
Production
Lead Time
Cycle Time
Mins
Mins
100
Days
Mins
Mins
Quality
95
Cycle Time
Quality
Production
Lead Time
Cycle Time
Mail to Corporate
via Cleveland
80
CSC Receives
Order
Interoffice 3 X week
File a Copy
Quality
Production 60 Mins
Lead Time
Cycle Time
CSC Enters
Information
into SAP
Receiving Information
Current State
POST
10x Day
Customer
Foundations of Lean 39
There are two kinds of kaizen: system (also called flow) and process
(Figure 2.9). System kaizen attempts to improve the overall value stream
by enhancing material and information flow, and is the focus of management. Process kaizen, performed by teams and individuals, concentrates on reducing waste in specific focus areas within the value stream.
Improvement in one type of kaizen positively impacts the other.
* See Beau Keyte and Drew Locher, The complete Lean enterprise: Value stream mapping for administrative and office processes (New York: Productivity Press, 2004); and Mike Rother and John
Shook, Learning to see (Cambridge, MA: Lean Enterprise Institute, 1999).
See Masaaki Imai, Kaizen: The key to Japans competitive success (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1986).
Foundations of Lean 41
Senior
Mgmt
Mid
Mgmt
Process Kaizen
(elimination of waste)
People
Process
Team
Members
Top down
Process Focus
Daily
Kaizen
Bottom up
Figure 2.9
Kaizen types
Foundations of Lean 43
work encourages innovation. Why? It is virtually impossible to improve
a process that is unstable or not consistently performed. As work procedures are standardized, employees experience stable work processes upon
which they can build.
5S and the Visual Workplace
5S is a workplace organization method. Roughly translated to English
from Japanese, 5S stands for Sort, Set in Order, Shine, Standardize, and
Sustain.* 5S provides a systematic approach for cleaning up, organizing,
and maintaining an orderly workplace. Disorganized work environments
encourage wasteful business practices and hide underlying problems.
They also create mental clutter and chaos. Companies often begin their
Lean journey with 5S, not only to establish a foundation of order, but also
to raise awareness of business processes, sources of waste, and opportunities for improvement (see the Con-way Virtual 5S case study).
5S also lays the groundwork for the visual workplace, eliminating visual
and mental noisecreating an environment where the status of work is
so self-apparent that emerging problems call attention to themselves. By
actively displaying the information that needs to be shared, the visual
workplace provides people with the information they need to know without having to ask for it. A great deal of time is wasted on interruptions to
answer questions such as What is the status of? Most status inquiries
are no longer necessary in a visual workplace, since the answers to such
queries are constantly displayed, updated, and accessible to all.
Endnotes
1. Eliyahu Goldratt, The Goal, (Great Barrington: North River Press, 1984).
2. James P. Womack, Daniel T. Jones, and Daniel Roos, The machine that changed the
world (New York: HarperCollins, 1990).
3. Michael Hammer and James Champy, Reengineering the corporation (New York:
HarperCollins, 2003).
4. James P. Womack and Daniel T. Jones, Lean thinking (New York: Free Press, 1996),
1626.
5. The Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence: Model-application guidelines, 3rd ed.
(Logan: Utah State University, Jon M. Huntsman School of Business), 3.
6. Stephen Covey, Principle-centered leadership (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992).
7. Peter Senge, The fifth discipline, rev. ed. (New York: Random House, 2006).
8. Steven Spear and H. Kent Bowen, Decoding the DNA of the Toyota Production System
(Boston: Harvard Business Press, 2007).
9. Jeffrey K. Liker, The Toyota way (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004), 108.
10. Lou V. Gerstner, Who says elephants cant dance? (New York: HarperBusiness, 2002),
182.
11. Diagram supplied by The Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence (Logan: Utah State
University, Jon M. Huntsman School of Business, 2009).
3
The Lean IT and Business Partnership
Chapter Objectives
Having established the fundamentals of Lean, we turn our focus to information and information systems as an often untapped source of value. We will:
The most important, and indeed the truly unique contribution of management in the 20th century was the fifty-fold increase in the productivity of
the manual worker in manufacturing. The most important contribution
management needs to make in the 21st century is similarly to increase the
productivity of knowledge work and knowledge workers.
Peter Drucker
We can all agree that quality information is an essential business asset that
guides behavior and supports good decisions.
Every business process relies on quality information and effective information systems, whether manual or electronic, as the flow of information supports the flow of work and the creation of value. And most organizations in
this modern age have no choice but to rely heavily on electronic information
systems due to the volume, complexity, or global reach of their activities.
45
This list, their voice of the customer, was on their collective minds that
week, and nicely frames the essential value proposition we will explore
throughout this book. Clearly, if Lean IT can address these issues, it will
be a tremendous catalyst for positive change, overcoming inertia and
resistance that has prevented many organizations from advancing further
in their journey of continuous improvement.
But as we all know, such breakthrough change is often disruptive,
threatening, and uncomfortable. Most individuals and organizations need
a compelling reason to change, a burning platform from which they have
no choice but to jump.
Succeeded
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
Failed
40%
30%
Challenged
20%
10%
0%
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
Figure3.1
But IT is not like other departments; managing this degree of complexity, volatility, and risk requires a balance of professionalism, technical know-how, artful prioritization, and a little magic. And through it
all the business must keep running, so the IT staff is charged with maintaining order, stability, and performance, while steadfastly preventing
unplanned downtime.
Lean versus Traditional IT: A Natural Tension?
Perhaps there is a conflict arising from the very nature of traditional IT
and Lean practices, as suggested by the table in Figure3.2.
As you can see from this comparison, traditional IT organizational
practices typically move slowly and carefully to avoid instability and business disruption, while Lean encourages every individual to notice and fix
problems by making small improvements each and every day. This difference creates a tension that permeates the daily activities and interactions among business and IT associates. We are not suggesting these are
irreconcilable differences leading to constant conflict and confrontation,
though that seems to happen within some organizations. We are simply
calling attention to natural tendencies that, left unaddressed, may create
friction, causing the IT organization to disengage or even resist the ongoing improvement of business processes.
Change Management
Organization
Measures
Knowledge Management
Education
Definition of Success
Lean
Organic, incremental, and
continuous
Cross-functional teams
Top-down and bottom-up
performance measures
linking improvement
initiatives to strategic goals
Generalization
Process focus
Speed and Agility
Traditional IT
Engineered and planned
large events
Central command and
control
Cost containment and
uptime
Specialization
Task focus
Stability
Figure3.2
Legacy Systems
A common example of ineffective IT and business coordination is the
existence of a significant legacy information systemhomegrown or
extensively modified software that remains in place long past its useful life
cycle. A legacy system may persist for a number of reasons, among them:
unique or unusual business processes are dependent upon it, it may rely
on obsolete or obscure technology, those who designed and built it have
long since left the company, and the system has been patched repeatedly
but the changes are poorly documented. As a result, most IT associates are
reluctant to tinker with a legacy system unless its absolutely necessary.
Legacy systems are like organizational scar tissuethey form around
injuries in the business processes, building layer upon layer of hardened
procedures, and limiting flexibility of the process while causing pain.
And each time business requirements change, a new layer of reactive
changes and patches are added. Over the years the legacy system becomes
increasingly fragile, the user workarounds more contrived, and the business processes more ineffective and resistant to change. This degenerative process causes the accumulation of technical debt, a liability that
extracts daily payments in the form of waste and inefficiency, until the
debt is liquidated.
For example, one client was replacing a 20-year-old legacy system that
had been extensively customized to fit their unique requirements, like
a well-fitting but worn-out old glove. Over the years the 100-year-old
Most people require about 15 minutes to productively resume a challenging task when they are interrupted even by something as innocuous
as an e-mail alert, scientists at Microsoft Research and the University of
Illinois found in a 2007 study.5 While 15 minutes may not seem like much
time, if interruptions occur several times a day, this can add up to serious
performance degradation or worse.
Interruptions seem to be a fact of life, but they are costly in terms of
time, concentration, and quality. Awareness of this fact can, over time,
lead to changing work patterns and communication practices, and setting
aside uninterrupted time and space to tackle difficult tasks. In our experience, especially in the office environment, many interruptions are for
simple status inquiries such as Where is this? When will that be done?
and What do you need from me now? The effective use of simple visuals to communicate status and priority of work can significantly reduce
Moving materials from one location Physical or virtual transportation of Handoff of information across organito another
documents
zation boundaries and multiple systems,
security barriers to information flow
Doing more work than the customer Producing reports that nobody reads, Redundant data, unnecessary transacwants (e.g., unnecessary product overuse of the email reply all button, tions, unused reports, software features
features)
expediting
that users dont need
Bending, lifting, twisting, walking, Walking, copying, filing, searching for Searching for information, reentering
packing/unpacking, searching for materials and information
data, excessive keystrokes, frequently
stuff
shifting priorities
Defects that require correction or Work passed on that is incomplete, Incorrect, untimely, and confusing
cause scrap
incorrect, or requires clarification
information that causes bad decisions
Transportation
Over processing
Motion
Defects
Figure3.3
Waiting for materials from the Waiting for unnecessary signature or System downtime, unnecessary workupstream workcenter
approval or monthly closing processes, flow steps
time wasted in unproductive meetings
Delays
IT
Producing more or sooner than the Producing documents before they are Excessive email, reports, system alerts,
customer needs
needed, doing a large batch of paper- etc., that are not read or acted upon
work that the downstream worker cant
handle all at once
Office
Overproduction
Manufacturing
Excess raw material, work in pro- Work accumulating in physical and Excessive information causing searchcess, and finished goods
virtual inboxes, excess physical files
ing and version control problems, excessive backlog and work in progress
Inventory
Waste
How well do we
understand them?
High
Product
development
team
Internal
Low
Top ten
customers by
sales $
External
Medium
Figure3.4
Figure3.5
Disruptive technologies
Accelerated technology
upgrade or introduction
cycles
Information explosion
Lack of business
governance & controls
Increasing Complexity of
Information Systems
Proliferation of
IT Systems
Waste Surrounding
Information &
Related Technologies
Spreadsheet on
Shared Drive
Approve PurchOrd
Finance Mgr
Approve
PurchOrd into
ERP
Enter PurchOrd
into ERP
Process Time = 10 m
Lead Time = 1 d
ERP System
IN
Quality = 95%
Process Time = 10 m
Lead Time = 4 h
Quality = 90%
IN
Process Time = 5 m
Lead Time = 1 d
Quality = 90%
Figure3.6
support. Knowledge management tools serve to standardize, disseminate, and manage standard work instructions across the enterprise.
The work of the IT organization itself should also be standardized to
encourage quality and consistency, avoiding pockets of specialized
knowledge that create a dependency on specific individuals.
Measurement: The keys to a sustainable Lean transformation are
standardized work, accompanied by good measures that provide
feedback to ensure the continuing effectiveness of currently defined
processes, and to identify new opportunities for improvement.
Reporting and analyses are derived from data generated by the organizations manual and electronic information systems, so IT associates are often called on to assist with the design of measurement
systems.
Workplace organization (5S): Sort, Straighten, Shine, Standardize,
and Sustain your IT assets: storage, hardware, software, licenses,
workspaces, processes, data, knowledge, and intellectual property.
Visual workplace: Make IT process and project flow and status visible to everyone, calling attention to impending problems and avoiding status inquiry interruptions. Visual process measures and alerts
are often automated, providing proactive notification of exceptions
to identify problems and initiate immediate corrective and preventative action.
Cellular organization: People and equipment supporting all or part
of a process are co-located (either physically or virtually using online
tools) to encourage smooth workflow, collaborative problem solving,
knowledge sharing, and continuous improvement.
Demand management: IT organizations commonly have backlogs that are years long, and are often lacking clear prioritization
or decision-making processes. Chaotic demand (mura)variation
from sudden spikes, frequent interruptions, and priority changes
contributes to overburden (mura), which leads to wasteful activity
(muda). By working with the business to manage priorities and create level demand, matching it to available capacity to create a steady
pace of work (flow), an IT organization can become more responsive,
giving customers exactly what they want, when they want it.
Strategy deployment (also known as hoshin kanri): Articulate strategy and align daily work through all levels and dimensions of the
organization, ensuring that process improvement and supporting
Endnotes
Section II
Integration
Aligning Lean IT
and the Business
4
Lean IT and Business
Process Improvement
Chapter Objectives
In this chapter we discover how an expanded role for an IT organization
that embraces Lean can support and promote business process improvement. We will:
Establish ITs role as a catalyst of business process improvement,
leading the way in bridging functional silos.
Consider the unintended complexities created by the reengineering
trend of the 1990s.
Explore the convergence of strategic alignment, information systems, Lean thinking, and the lessons learned from enterprise-wide
system implementations.
Examine how a Lean IT organization can deliver agility, best practices, and effective measurements throughout an organization.
Consider the role of strategy in clarifying priorities, aligning effort,
and driving innovation.
The commandand-control organization that first emerged in the 1870s
might be compared to an organism held together by its shell. The corporation that is now emerging is being designed around a skeleton: information,
both the corporations new integrating system and its articulation.1
Peter Drucker
69
Management
Customer
Relations
Supply
Product &
Service
Development
Operations
Information &
Information
Systems
Figure4.1
Strategic
Planning
Figure4.2
S
U
P
P
L
I
E
R
S
Product and
Service
Design and
Development
Sales and
Order Capture
Procure and
Build/ Service
Delivery
Systems/
Program/
Product Mgmt
Service and
Support
P
U
L
L
C
U
S
T
O
M
E
R
S
Stable Processes
Standard Procedures
Predictable Outcomes
Minimal Disruption
Rigidity
Figure4.3
Flexibility
Fluid Processes
Responsive Procedures
Less Predictable Outcomes
Frequent Changes
Adaptability
The better defined a process is, the more efficiently it can be executed. Process standardization creates efficiencies, and information
systems should be designed to reinforce explicitly defined procedures.
Efficient processes are fortified when information systems automate
routine tasks, such as mistake-proofing data entry, and providing feedback for ongoing improvement. Applying the 80/20 rule, simplifying
and automating the 20 percent of core processes that account for 80
percent of the volume and burden can make a significant and immediate impact on efficiency, freeing up human capacity for practices that
require experience and judgment
On the other hand, information used in practice work is typically
unstructured, difficult to define, and often experiential. When improving practices, the focus is on supporting a learning organization through
an accessible collection of knowledge of past experiences to enable situation-specific decision making. To support practice work, knowledge management systems should be designed to manage both unstructured data
(searchable content, documents, and images) and structured data (information in transactional databases, drilldown reports, trend analyses, etc.).
They may also provide access to collaborative social networks, forums,
blogs, wikis, and other sources of free-form knowledge sharing.
Over time, some of the elements of practice work may be simplified and
standardized into processes, effectively creating more efficiency without
sacrificing agility. Successful organizations attempt to achieve an optimal
balance between process and practice which has been described as mass
customization: the ability to produce products and services with the flexibility to meet a wide range of customer needs while maintaining mass
Continuously
Improving
Quantitatively
Managed
Standardized
Loosely Defined
Unpredictable
Poorly controlled
Tacit knowledge
Inconsistent outputs
Figure4.4
Weve all heard the saying, Show me how youll measure me and Ill
tell you how Ill perform. Effective measurements focus peoples attention on the right things. Sustained improvement requires appropriate
performance measures, monitoring, and management. Without appropriate measures and the actionable information they provide, its just a matter of time before behaviors revert to the old ways of getting work done.
Measures guard against backsliding by focusing improvement efforts as
well as daily activities, emphasizing targeted results.
Often measures are taken, posted, and filed, but not utilized to drive
behavior. Effective organizations use constant goal setting supported by a
continuous measurement feedback loop to reinforce daily behavior which
drives positive change. If measurements do not enable people to move the
Results Measures
Banking Experience
On-Time Delivery
Customer Satisfaction
Warranty Claims
Patient Experience
Retail Experience
Figure4.5
Innovating Processes
Drive Competitive Differentiation
Supporting Processes
Maintain Competitive Parity
Low
Focus on continuous
improvement to drive
operational excellence and
cost reduction
Mission
Critical
High
Figure4.6
But alignment is an ambiguous word and doesnt convey the full picture.
IT and the business must work side by side as partners: learning, prioritizing, planning, executing, and measuring the results of process improvement and innovation initiatives. For such a tightly woven relationship we
prefer the term integration. But no matter what you choose to call it, how
you go about achieving it is the real challenge.
Quality information and effective information systems connect, support, and enable process improvement throughout the enterprise. Because
information is the essential lifeblood that coordinates the flow of work
and creation of value to the customer, the contribution of the IT organization is pivotal to the ultimate success of the organization and its value
streams. In the end, organizational effectiveness is about each individual
doing the small things wellseamlessly blending daily work and ongoing
improvement.
Endnotes
1. Peter Drucker, The essential Drucker (New York: HarperCollins, 2001), 111.
2. Michael Hammer is best known as the coauthor of Reengineering the corporation,
which launched the era of business process reengineering; see Michael Hammer and
James Champy, Reengineering the corporation (New York: HarperCollins, 2003).
3. Jeffrey K. Liker, The Toyota way (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004), 160.
4. Baruch Lev, Intangibles: Management, measurement, and reporting (Washington, DC:
Brookings Institution Press, 2001), The book of the month: Intangibles: Management,
Measurement, and Reporting by Baruch Lev, http://www.juergendaum.com/
news/10_30_2001.htm.
5. See Jay Galbraith, Designing matrix organizations that actually work (San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass, 2008).
6. Michael Hugo, Business Agility (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2009), 4.
7. Michael Grieves, Product lifecycle management (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2006),
148.
8. Michael English and William Baker, Winning the knowledge transfer race (New York:
McGraw-Hill, 2006), 39.
9. Watts Humphrey, Managing the software process (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley,
1989).
10 Michael Hammer, The 7 deadly sins of performance measurement (and how to avoid
them) (Boston: MIT Sloan Management Review, Spring 2007), 19.
11. John McCormick, CIO, as chief process officer, interview with Michael Hammer, Oct.
3, 2007. www.cioinsight.com
12. Mark Everett Hall, Private clouds gaining traction among IT shops, InfoWorld,
October 27, 2009 www.infoworld.com/print/97560.
13. Gary Hamel and C.K. Prahalad, Strategic intent, Harvard Business Review, May
June 1989, 6376.
14. Dan Miklovic, Predicts 2010: Global economic stress changes markets for manufacturing solutions, December 7 (Stamford, CT: Gartner, 2009).
15. Pollyanna Pixton, Niel Nickolaisen, Todd Little, and Kent McDonald, Stand back and
deliver: Accelerating business agility (Reading, MA: Wesley Professional. 2009), 15.
5
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean
Manufacturing: Flow and Pull
Chapter Objectives
Looking back on the last five decades of Leans evolution, we find many
important lessons learned that have a direct applicability to Lean IT, whatever the industry. We will:
Examine flow, pull, and visual signals and contrast their simplicity
and clarity with the complexity of material requirements planning
(MRP), a popular manufacturing push-scheduling technique.
Explore kanban, heijunka, and mixed model production and understand their impact on stability, efficiency, and flexibility (agility).
Propose a step-by-step process for creating an effective IT demand
management decision-making process.
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.
Leonardo da Vinci
Factories are complex and chaotic places where events rarely go as planned.
When not approached with caution, software intervention can amplify the
existing complexity and chaos. Lean manufacturing practitioners have
learned to simplify their production processes, aligning, balancing, and
reallocating resources so work will flow along value streams, orchestrating
97
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 101
Constant interruptions and shifting priorities, when communicated to
the shop floor, cause workers to spend more time and energy chasing the
schedule and performing costly machine changeovers (often making them
jittery and nervous, too). So planners attempt to compensate by buffering
with excess inventory, stocking more than is necessary in order to ride out
variability while making fewer changes to the production schedule.
But as companies offer more options to their customers, as supply chains
become more complex and geographically extended, and as customers
continue demanding shorter lead times, the amount of excess inventory
needed to buffer increasing uncertainty inevitably reaches a tipping point.
Taiichi Ohno of Toyota identified excess inventory, and the overproduction (non-just-in-time) that created it, to be the primary causes of waste.
Furthermore, excess inventory hides other forms of waste, hindering their
identification and elimination.
Even the most powerful computers and sophisticated software cant
solve this fundamental problem: the more we strive to control complexity
through forecasting and push scheduling, the more the laws of uncertainty
and chaos push back. So to many Lean manufacturing practitioners, MRP
is perceived as the enemy of simplicity, agility, and flow.
But there are situations where MRP and other sophisticated planning
and scheduling software tools are useful in Lean manufacturing and supply
chain operations, as long as they are applied judiciously, with awareness of
their limitations. The enemy is not the technology, but our assumption that
we can somehow control complexity by throwing more complexity at it.
What is the key limiting factor in this scenario? Time! The further into
the future an organization forecasts, the more uncertainty it must anticipate and buffer against, buying and building more inventory ahead of
time. And when customer preferences suddenly change, or the economy
takes a turn, the organization is burdened with this excess inventory. The
solution is to shorten the planning horizon, to the point where production is driven not by a forecast but by actual customer orders. The more
production is driven by customer pull signals, the less waste is created
throughout the supply chain.
Just-in-time production is simple to describe, but difficult to achieve. Just
as products, services, and processes differ from one company to another,
so do their planning and scheduling requirements. By understanding
these differences, Lean practitioners in any industry, and IT organizations
in particular, can understand how to apply Lean flow techniques.
O
ET
Individual
Product
Creation
Mass Customization
The Sweet Spot of Agility
O
AT
Process
TO
M
TS
M
Continuous
Flow
Mass
Production
Unique
Products
Figure5.1
Product
Standard
Products
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 103
Over the years, manufacturers have developed a variety of tactics to
provide customers with flexible, configurable products built upon standard, modular options that can be delivered quickly to customers specific
requirements. This approach, called mass customization, is covered by the
central region of the diagonal. While some speed and flexibility are sacrificed, and marginal cost is added, the result is agility: the ability to quickly
respond to changing market conditions and customer demand, based on a
standard set of configurable products and processes, with minimal inventory in the pipeline.
The full expression of this approach is called mixed model production,
where each unit flowing on a production line may carry different specifications. At an automobile manufacturer, for example, a red sedan with
leather interior may be followed immediately by a blue passenger van with
cloth interior, flowing down the same line at a steady pace. The right mix
of materials is ready at the point of use, replenished by kanban (discussed
shortly), and production activities are supported by visual communications. At any moment a worker discovering a defect may stop the line to
quickly identify and correct its cause (quality at the source), improving
process stability and product quality along every step of the process.
Many Lean manufacturers are moving toward this sweet spot of mass
customization where an agile enterprise can respond to varying customer
requirements with short lead time and relatively low cost. With a little
creativity, Lean practitioners in nonmanufacturing applications (including IT) find they can apply the diagonal sweet-spot metaphor to their
own products and services, since it represents an agile balance of efficiency and flexibility.
Lets try it now. Think of an office process in your company (e.g., processing a medical laboratory order, handling an insurance claim, or making
a hotel reservation) where most of the time everything is normal and the
process flows smoothly. But every now and then, a variable is introduced
that slows the process down. Suddenly the associate doesnt know exactly
what to do and has to stop what he or she is doing to search for materials or
information. Flow is suddenly interruptednot just for this one transaction, but also for all work queued up behind it.
While it is certainly not easy to make a process flow, there are several
basic issues to consider. First, think about how you would identify all the
common variations (options, configurations) in the product or service that
the customer would value. How might you standardize and categorize them
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 105
2. Indicates the specific work to be done: Kanban signals contain a
description of the work to be done next, which clarifies the sequence
of work priorities for supervisors and associates.
3. Controls the amount of work in process: By regulating the quantity of
kanbans within a process, inventory is limited.
4. Buffers interruptions: By keeping a small, carefully calculated buffer
of safety stock between operational steps (also called a supermarket),
the downstream operation is not starved by a temporary interruption from an upstream operation.
5. Orchestrates the pace of work: Since each operation is only working
according to pull signals, the work flows at a natural cadence. A sudden interruption is easily spotted, and workers quickly converge and
troubleshoot the problem in order to restart the process flow.
While kanban is simple to describe, the variations are limited only by
the creativity of the team designing the system. In a manufacturing setting we have seen kanbans implemented using cards, bins, pallets, colored
golf balls, flashing lights, and other clever devices.
Its important to keep kanbans physical and visual whenever possible, but
sometimes electronic kanban communications are appropriate. Electronic
kanban signals include on-demand printed kanban cards with bar coding, overhead or kiosk electronic displays at each work center, roaming
wireless devices, e-mail messages, and other computerized methods. The
rapid communication of supplier replenishment over long distances can
significantly reduce supply chain inventories and delays. Electronic data
interchange (EDI) messages (demand signals) are often sent to suppliers
(external vendors, as well as internal suppliers within an extended enterprise) to trigger replenishment, reducing labor costs, while preventing
delays and data entry errors. Rather than an MRP system sending periodic release messages on a push-scheduled basis, however, electronic kanban pull signals should be triggered in real time by workflow events.
Electronic supplier kanban can be surprisingly simple. Years before webcams became popular and inexpensive, Boeing deployed a clever supplier
replenishment visual kanban system. First, they organized the raw material storage location, using shelving and tape. It was very easy to view this
area and quickly determine when replenishment was needed. After establishing min/max levels with their supplier, Boeing trained a web camera
on this space. Boeing provided the supplier with a secure link so it could
Standard
Kanban is
5 Work Units
Pull
Step 1
Input
Figure5.2
Office kanban.
Three Empty
Slots Signals Possible
Upstream Flow Interruption,
Worker Visits Step 2
to Offer Assistance
Pull
Step 2
Processing
Pull
Step 3
Processing
Step 4
Output
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 107
laminated card and hang it on a plastic hook on the bulletin board right
next to the phone, where the order entry person will see it. Once this system was implemented, staff labor dedicated to order placement plummeted
from eight hours per week to 10 minutes per day. Inventory was reduced
by about half, stockouts all but ceased, and the investment in an expensive
new information system was avoided.
Just like a factory, when an office value stream extends across a distance
(such as several buildings in a campus setting, or around the globe), there
is limited physical visibility to kanban status without electronic communications. Thus electronic workflow and backlog/inbox management rules
may be designed to follow simple kanban logic, with automated escalation
alerts calling attention to exception and error conditions.
Figure5.3
Level schedule
board visually
displays load,
production
schedule, and
expected delivery
time
Demand
35 pm
13 pm
1012 am
810 am
Pull
Step 2
Processing
Step 1
Input
Pull
Pull
Step 3
Processing
Pull
Step 4
Processing
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 109
the front of the queue. The remaining work shifts to a later slot, but since
this work has not yet been released, its reprioritization does not disrupt
the flow of work already in process. Once work is released it flows quickly
(just-in-time) to completion and on to the customer, so expediting is
unnecessary.
With a little creativity, level scheduling and kanban methods can be
applied to any product or service process in any industry. In Chapter 8, we
explore how these methods have been applied to Lean software development (also known as agile).
By simplifying process, product, and service design, and through the
creative use of kanban and level-scheduling methods, the informationprocessing requirements of many processes can be simplified. This stabilizes the environment, helping to maintain service-level agreements with
customers, while avoiding the investment and complication of sophisticated software and the cost and chaos it often creates.
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 111
The result of this dysfunctional behavior is the haphazard alignment of
IT activities with business goals, and the squandering of IT resources and
investments. This all but guarantees dissatisfied customers, in both IT and
business, who see the chaos and learn to game the system to get what they
think they require, and hope the situation will somehow remedy itself. This
often leads customers to ask for more than they need, sooner than they
need it, in an attempt to compensate for unreliable and inconsistent delivery performance. Backlog sandbagging creates even more overload and lost
accountability, making matters even worseand the cycle begins anew.
Such haggling and arm-twisting cause demoralization and loss of trust
within the ranks of IT and across the organization, reminiscent of the
old adage to just keep whipping the horse harder to make him run faster.
Ultimately the best people leave for greener pastures (or, worse, for medical reasons), perpetuating chronic IT underperformance.
Perhaps weve exaggerated a bit, painting an overly grim picture? But
then again, perhaps we havent. According to the CIO Magazine article A
New Model for IT Demand Management,
Demand management is clearly the missing link in most IT departments.
Far from being the rational and structured process we would like it to be,
[IT] demand management is usually a nebulous combination of decibel
management [whoever yells the loudest gets the attention] and organizational politics, significantly amplified in international organizations when
country politics and cultural differences are thrown into the mix.7
Push
Figure5.4
Matching prioritized
demand with available
capacity
1. Demand planning
2. Capacity planning
3. Balancing
4. Executive Review
Demand Management
Cycle
Pull
IT Value Stream
IT Value Stream
IT Value Stream
IT Value Stream
Operations
Projects
Kaizen Participation
IT Backlog
Work Requests
Pull
Customers
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 113
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 115
more frequent orders for smaller quantities, creating a level pace of
demand to the supplier, while reducing supply chain inventory. The
same approach applies to IT demand planning, whether in the iterative, synchronized steps of a software development project, or the
rapid execution of small, operational steps. When customers develop
confidence that they can request something important and receive it
soon afterward, they begin requesting changes in smaller increments
over a shorter time horizon, which makes their requirements more
precise. This creates a smooth flow of smaller work requests, which
can be managed by a level schedule.
Capacity Planning
During the second week of the month, IT department and project managers, and IT value stream owners, review the various IT project and value
stream loads to determine available capacity. When determining available
resource capacity, the question often arises about how to plan for ordinary
time commitments such as meetings, e-mail management, breaks, and
ongoing kaizen participation. The simplest approach is to allocate a percentage of total work time for such activities. Critical capacity constraints
should also be clearly identified and addressed.*
The distinction between value streams and IT projects is important:
1. Value streams are relatively permanent groups of resources, often
physically or virtually co-located, that perform similar ongoing
activities. For example, a value stream may support the processes
of a particular line of business, a domain of IT operations such as
security or communications, a specific software application, or
an enterprise application integration infrastructure. With dedicated value stream resources, the scheduling challenges of shared
resources are avoided. Teams are cross-trained and internally load
balance, enabling a stable pace of workflow. While the assignment of
resources to individual value streams usually results in an incremental increase in total enterprise resources, long ago Lean manufacturers discovered that this trade-off was worthwhile, since flow reduced
total operating costs, improved stability, quality, and productivity;
* See the Theory of Constraints.
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 117
higher priority element. Demand management is concerned primarily
with prioritization of loading the backlog. Furthermore, backlogs must
be kept to a reasonable duration. Many organizations impose a finite
length, such as six months or one year. Requests that do not make the
backlog should not be kept on an informal back burner list to be slipped
into the backlog by sleight of hand. Resubmitted requests should pass
the same rigorous qualification process as new requests.
Summary materials are then prepared for the executive review session.
The strategic and financial impact of each issue is considered at this time.
When decisions requiring management authorization are needed (such as
significant investment for new resources, new equipment, or a new partner
relationship), alternative scenarios and recommendations are prepared for
the executive session. If consensus on a particular trade-off decision cannot be reached, then justifications and supporting information should be
prepared to inform an executive decision.
Executive Review
This brief (target two-hour) meeting should occur late in the third week
of each month, allowing the organization time to prepare for the following months activity. The meeting agenda should be standardized, concise,
and tightly facilitated. The root cause of any significant deviation from
the meeting agenda (often due to lack of preparation, unclear recommendations, or excessive detail) should be investigated and prevented from
recurring in future cycles (this is PDCA applied to effective meetings).
The executive review is much more than just a rubber-stamp session; it
may be the only time when non-IT executives get to look deep inside the
engine room to understand IT concerns and their impact on the enterprise. This monthly session aligns tactical operational IT activities with
strategic objectives. Information should be presented at a high level, but
assumptions and recommendations must be clearly documented, and
stakeholders should be prepared to instantly drill down to the underlying
details when requested. Meeting notes should be recorded, capturing firm
decisions and open issues (parking lot) to be investigated.
The monthly demand management cycle is a good example of a management system (explored in the next chapter), where management is accountable for standard, repeatable performance, creating an environment of
stability throughout the enterprise. In the dynamic world of IT demand
Lean IT Lessons Learned from Lean Manufacturing: Flow and Pull 119
Endnotes
1. Christopher Koch, Nike rebounds: How (and why) Nike recovered from its supply
chain disaster, CIO Magazine, June 2004, www.cio.com/article/32334/.
2. Steven Castellanos, interview, February 14, 2010.
3. Jennifer Zaino, The Tesco directive: Standardize and innovate: Smart IT decisions
help the retail giants operations run Lean, SmartEnterprise 3, no. 2 (2009): www.
smartenterprisemag.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=217701399.
4. George Plossl, Orlickys material requirements planning, 2nd ed. (New York: McGrawHill, 1995), 7.
5. Robert H. Hayes and Steven C. Wheelwright, Link manufacturing process and product lifecycles, Harvard Business Review (JanuaryFebruary 1979): 133140.
6. Naida Grunden, The Pittsburgh way to efficient healthcare (New York: Productivity
Press, 2008).
7. Michael Gentle, A new model for IT demand management, CIO Magazine, October
9, 2007, www.cio.com.au/article/196728/.
6
Lean Management Systems
Chapter Objectives
In this chapter we will explore the following elements of a Lean management system that are typically supported by IT shared services and discuss
how a Lean IT approach can make them more effective:
Communication
Knowledge management and collaboration
Performance measurement and business intelligence
Strategy deployment
Lean accounting
Clearly, a well-designed framework of shared information system services is necessary to enable an effective Lean management system. It is difficult to imagine getting a days work done without e-mail, shared drives,
collaborative workspaces, and reporting and analysis tools. But each of
these alluring productivity-enhancing tools can also potentially distract
our focus, causing us to mistake activity for productivity.
Communication
Few will argue that e-mail and meetings are out of control in many
organizations. Office workers often report a large part of each day is spent
wading through e-mail or trapped in ineffective meetings, diverted from
their value-adding work.
When does e-mail add value? The answer to this question in part depends
on the nature of the work each individual performs. The further people are
removed from the hands-on operational activity of the business, the less
structured work and communications they perform. So we should expect
a larger part of managers and executives daily activity to include communications by e-mail, phone, and meetings.
Furthermore, organizations on the Lean journey usually experience more
cross-functional interaction as they practice systems thinking, breaking
down organizational silos and concentrating on value streams. This naturally causes additional email traffic and increased meeting frequency.
While such less-structured communications are important, excessive
or inappropriate e-mail traffic, endless conference calls, and back-to-back
meetings leaving no time for reflection or follow-up can cause significant
waste. These wastes include waiting (high-value-added work is delayed
because the person is distracted by low-value activities), unused human
potential (frequent e-mail and instant messaging interruptions sap creativity and energy), and overprocessing (reading the same e-mail thread
multiple times before acting on the situation, or attending redundant,
unproductive meetings).
80%
Unstructured
Data
Structured
Data
16%
4%
Performance Measurement
A sound performance measurement strategy is a critical foundation for successful and sustaining continuous improvement. Standardized work creates
a stable process baseline for improvement, then measurements provide constant feedback on how well those standards are performing, helping teams
determine where best to focus the next round of improvement activity.
A well-designed measurement system is also essential for an effective
Lean management system. According to David Mann, Unlike managing
in a results-focused system, process focus implies frequent measurement
against expected intermediate outcomes. As necessary, interventions can
be started before the end results are affected.5
In order to respond quickly when corrective intervention is needed, feedback should be immediate and visual. Consider the difference between
push and pull performance measurement. Push performance measurement
involves periodic reports that may identify problems some time after they have
occurred. Pull is immediate, event-driven, exception-based feedback, allowing individuals to focus their attention on the problem at hand.* The faster
* One example is the automated publish-subscribe method of asynchronous messaging, which prevents broadcasting unwanted information. Users subscribe to a particular topic, and the system
publishes information on that specific subject whenever an important event occurs, in various
formats such as e-mail alerts and exception reports. This is pull, where the user asks the information system to send me what I need to know the moment it happens.
Purpose
Users
Scope
Information
Updates
Emphasis
Operational
Monitor operations
Supervisors,
specialists
Operational
Detailed
Intra-day
Monitoring
Tactical
Measure progress
Managers, analysts
Departmental
Detailed/summary
Daily/weekly
Analysis
Strategic
Execute strategy
Executives, managers,
staff
Enterprise
Detailed/summary
Monthly/quarterly
Management
Figure6.2
Automated alerts notify individuals to conditions that may indicate an emerging problem or condition requiring immediate
attention. Operational dashboards often use visual displays (dials,
thermometers, flashing lights, etc.) to display status, and are
typically in plain view using electronic signboards, kiosks, wireless devices, and even electronic andons (e.g., lights or sounds)
to attract attention. High-level indicators are often able to drill
down, displaying additional detailed data as needed to assist in
problem solving.
Tactical dashboards and scorecards: Provide managerial views of operational processes, projects, and kaizen activity. They typically identify
exceptions and provide analysis capabilitiesboth simple self-service analytics, as well as sophisticated tools for specialized analyses
(e.g., forecasting, modeling, and predictive statistics). For example,
overall equipment effectiveness (OEE) measures are a good application for tactical dashboards, since they summarize volumes of operational data helpful for total productive maintenance (TPM) activities.*
Visual project and process status indicators can significantly reduce
interruptions by supervisors and managers. And, as many managers
are always on the move, these systems are often capable of sending
alerts and visuals to smartphones and other handheld devices.
* OEE is a set of metrics used to measure availability, performance, and quality of a tool or process;
TPM is a preventative maintenance program where the operator or team is responsible to monitor
and care for their equipment.
Strategy Deployment
A Lean enterprise continuously strives to align itself, engaging in systems
thinking, reaching beyond localized improvements to achieve a holistic
and sustaining transformation. Peter Senge stresses that empowering the
individual when there is a relatively low level of alignment worsens the
chaos and makes managing the team even more difficult.10 Once aligned,
Act
Do
Ca
tch
Check
ba
Plan
ll
Act
Do
Strategic
Long term strategy
Midterm strategy
Kaikaku (breakthrough
improvement)
Annual hoshin plan
Check
Tactical
Value streams
Divisions
Business units
Departments
Ca
tch
ba
ll
D
C
Operational
Supporting processes
Projects
Kaizen (continuous
improvement)
Figure6.3
catchball discussions center on the A3, which helps focus thinking and
clarify communications.
Regular meetings at each level establish a steady cadence of interaction
and feedback, essential to leader standard work and daily accountability.
Teams then assess cause-and-effect relationships and develop appropriate
countermeasures and action plans to achieve established targets. In addition to the regular pace of standard meetings, ad hoc dialogue occurs spontaneously whenever a problem is identified that requires managerial input.
At the operational level of the strategy deployment hierarchy, a team or
individual is able to clearly relate how their actions and initiatives support
the strategic goals of the organization. Strategy deployment thus provides
an internal governance mechanism, guiding priorities so resources are consistently targeted across every level and dimension of the organization.
Strategy deployment decentralizes decision making, shifting problem
solving from traditional functional heads to teams that are closer to the
Now that weve explored the role that information, information systems,
and the IT organization play in a Lean management system, we conclude
this chapter with a brief exploration of why financial decisions are often
misinformedand what we can do to change this.
To frame this discussion, lets briefly explore an important, yet often
misunderstood, discipline: Lean accounting.* Why is this subject so
important? If youve eliminated waste, reduced inventory, cut cycle times,
and increased throughput by applying Lean, but have not changed your
accounting views or thought processes, you may be running your business
with potentially misleading information and burdening operations with
wasteful data collection.
Standard cost thinking does not compel Lean behavior; Lean accounting reflects operational and cash flow reality. If the fundamentals of Lean
accounting are not clearly understood, the CEO, CFO, and shareholders
can quickly kill a Lean transformation, just as it is beginning to take hold.
* Our focus here is on accounting for Lean results, not applying Lean techniques to improve the
efficiency of accounting operations (accounting for Lean, not Lean for accounting).
Focus
Lean
Value stream performance
against strategic objectives
Costing
Profit drivers
Transactions
Control
Performance
reporting
Traditional
Organizational performance,
department reports to compare
budget to actual
Allocated indirect costs, standard
costs that absorb overhead,
variance analyses attempt to drive
corrective action and process
change
Profit comes from full utilization of
resources, excess capacity is bad
Figure6.4
Controlling cost has always been high on the CIOs agenda, but after the
high-tech bubble burst in 2001, the resulting crisis of confidence in IT
caused many organizations to begin holding IT accountable to more rigorous cost-cutting measures. To many chief financial officers, running a
Lean IT budget implies weight lossreducing costs and resources as a
primary objective.
Lean practitioners clearly understand that a primary focus on cost
reduction, rather than value creation, is hazardous. Leading with a cost
focus can cause an organization to continue doing the wrong things more
efficiently. Worse yet, across-the-board mandated cuts may inflict irreparable injury to the long-term performance and health of the organization,
losing valuable knowledge.
Shigeo Shingo said, The four goals of improvement must be to make
things easier, better, faster, and cheaper.15 Note the sequence of this list;
Lean focuses on adding value and eliminating waste through simplification, quality improvement, and lead time reduction; cost reduction is
a natural outcome. According to Gartner, One of the biggest mistakes
companies make with Lean is focusing too heavily on driving cost out
of the business. If you approach Lean with that attitude, youre bound to
fail. Building a huge data center may give you great economies of scale, for
example, but it may also reduce agility and flexibility.16
Nevertheless, there is often a relentless emphasis on IT cost reduction,
especially during economic downturns. While many organizations (and
their shareholders) focus primarily on financial measures, this can lead
to short-term thinking at the expense of long-term value. For example,
when an employee wastes 10 hours each week performing non-value-
Endnotes
1. David Mann, Creating a Lean culture: Tools to sustain Lean conversions (New York:
Productivity Press, 2005), vi.
2. Bill Gates, keynote speech, Microsofts Second Annual CEO Summit, 1998.
3. Peter Senge, The fifth discipline, rev. ed. (New York: Doubleday, 2006), 270.
4 As the Economy Contracts, the Digital Universe Expands, EMC White Paper, May
2009.
5. David Mann, Creating a Lean culture: Tools to sustain Lean conversions (New York:
Productivity Press, 2005), 11.
6. Steven J. Spear, Chasing the rabbit (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2009), 2425.
7. Gwendolyn Galsworth, Visual workplace, visual thinking (Portland, OR: Visual-Lean
Enterprise Press, 2005).
8. Eckerson, Performance dashboards, 18.
9. Wayne Eckerson, Performance dashboards: Measuring, monitoring and managing
your business (New York: John Wiley, 2006).
10. Senge, The fifth discipline, 218.
11. Peter Hines, Daniel Jones, Richard Lamming, Paul Cousins, and Nick Rich, Value
stream management: Strategy and excellence in the supply chain (Upper Saddle River,
NJ: Financial Times Prentice Hall, 2000); James P. Womack, Daniel T. Jones, and
Daniel Roos, The machine that changed the world (New York: HarperCollins, 1990);
and James P. Womack and Daniel T. Jones, Lean thinking (New York: Free Press,
1996), 1626.
12. Hines et al., Value stream management, 116.
13. Brian Maskell and Bruce Baggaley, Practical Lean accounting (New York: Productivity
Press, 2004), 2.
14. Jean E. Cunningham, Orest Fiume, and Emily Adams. Real numbers: Management
accounting in a Lean organization. (Durham, NC: Managing Times Press, 2003), 92.
15. Alan Robinson, Modern approaches to manufacturing improvement: The Shingo system (New York: Productivity Press, 1990), 97.
16. Leon Erlanger, Smart enterprise insights: Going Lean, www.smartenterprisemag.
com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=217701405&pgno=3.
Section III
Performance
IT Operational Excellence
7
Lean IT Operations: ITIL
and Cloud Computing
Chapter Objectives
This chapter provides an introduction to Lean concepts applied to IT
operations, and the delivery of IT services to your organization and customers. We will:
Discuss how Lean IT creates a foundation for sustained IT operational excellence.
Explore how the Information Technology Infrastructure Library
(ITIL), a best practices framework for IT service management, complements Lean IT.
Speculate on the future of cloud computing and its implications for
the IT organization, from a Lean IT perspective.
The IT organization is like a black box to many business executives and
managers. Computers are everywhere, and our employees and customers depend on them virtually every minute of the day. When IT services
are functioning properly, IT operations are transparentwe dont notice
them. However, there is often an underlying fear of the unknown, of catastrophic failure, so organizations invest large sums of money and effort
in business continuity plans and disaster recovery preparednessthough
often not effectively addressing the root causes of potential failure.
149
Quality Is Free
Chronic information system instability, when it exists, is unacceptable.
And often, even when systems are stable, there is the perception of
instability and excessive cost, born from lack of comfort and understanding about how the IT operations function. In any case, IT operational excellence, and confidence in their performance, is necessary if
we are to trust information and information systems to support our
businesses.
In 1979 Philip Crosby published Quality Is Free, arguing that every dollar invested in quality is returned in profitability.1 Although Crosby was
addressing manufacturing at the time, the very same methods may be used
to ensure quality, consistency, reliability, and peace of mind when delivering IT services. After all, IT operations are a business, and they should be
run and measured like one. In the opening paragraph of Measuring ITIL,
author Randy Steinberg poses a challenge:
3
Service
Transition
2
Service
Design
1
Service
Strategy
Plan
Act
Do
4
Service
Operation
Check
5 Continuous
Service Improvement
Figure 7.1
organization and the customer work together to define a meaningful bundle of services and performance measures, but also uses PDCA to monitor and continuously improve the fit and quality of those services. This
approach is especially important because the customer understands and
defines the services they are agreeing to purchase, and is actively involved
in their definition, delivery and measurement.7
The ITIL Version 3 service lifecycle model consists of five stages, shown
in Figure 7.1:
1. Service strategy: Developing a clear vision and plan for service portfolio design, demand management, and IT financial management
2. Service design: Developing appropriate and innovative IT services,
including their architecture, processes, policy, and documents with
the goal of satisfying current and future business requirements
3. Service transition: Deploying new services, managing service
changes, and the knowledge related to those services
4. Service operation: Delivering services to clients at the agreed level of
service, while managing the applications and underlying technology
to support their delivery
5. Continuous service improvement: Sustaining and improving value
to the customer, collaborating on design improvements and service
modifications
Customers
Self Service
Incident
Management
Service Desk
(help desk)
Problem
Management
Change
Management
Knowledge
Management
Release
Management
Configuration
Management
Service Support
Service Level
Management
Availability
Management
9 Capacity
9 Financial
9 Continuity
Service Delivery
All ITIL functions and processes across the five life cycle stages are
interdependent; thus, feedback from one stage drives improvement in
another (see sidebar). This is system kaizen, where improvements in one
area of a process are felt throughout the entire value stream, creating
value for the customer.
How ITIL Supports Lean IT
Though ITIL appears to have evolved independently from Lean practice,
by understanding the similarities ITIL can be integrated with the enterprise-wide Lean IT transformation.
A3 Problem Solving
Problem solving is at the heart of ITIL. Beyond the philosophy of scientific problem solving and Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA), ITIL teams find
A3 problem solving can provide an essential step-by-step guide to help
them focus on solving a problem without wasted time or effort.
Voice of the Customer
ITIL problem management establishes a discipline of root cause analysis followed by corrective and preventative action. ITIL change management prevents abnormal conditions from occurring. Lean tools that may
assist include error proofing of processes and user interfaces, and visual
measurement of process performance with leading indicators of defects
or problems, all aimed toward helping to design quality into IT services.
Standard Work
IT associates are often rugged individualists, very smart people who like
to do things their own wayand that is often the fastest and newest way.
IT professionals and business end users alike are often guilty of wanting the latest software and equipmentbut this causes an endless churn
of new systems and configurations that must be supported, resulting in
unnecessary variability (muri), leading to pockets of technical specialization and chronic instability.
Many of the greatest challenges of IT operations are caused by lack of
standardized work, particularly the lack of standard hardware, peripherals, software, and system configurations. When standard hardware
models and configurations are encouraged throughout the enterprise,
this not only reduces purchase and support costs but also reduces spare
ITIL measurements have been well defined in recent years, with each measure focused on producing actionable results,* providing feedback to drive
continuous improvement:
Ratio of planned to unplanned IT work: Provides a good general measure of the stability of the environment. Although this
requires an investment to track unplanned work time, the data
are then useful as inputs for problem categorization and root
cause analysis.
Mean time between failure (MTBF): The average time between service interruptions. This is commonly used to measure hardware failure, but it can be equally effective with service failure.
Mean time to repair (MTTR): The average time to restore service
after an interruption.
Availability: The availability of a resource, which includes planned
and unplanned downtime.
Percentage of successful changes: This refers to changes that do not
result in downtime or unplanned work, requiring the correlation of
incident report data and change management data.
Server to system administrator ratio: Measures staffing levels required
to manage systems, indicating the degree of standard work, availability, and manageability of systems.
* Many of these measures are familiar to practitioners of Total Quality Management (TQM), Total
Preventative Maintenance (TPM), and Overall Equipment Effectiveness (OEE).
Though the terminology and best practices framework of ITIL are specific to the IT operations domain, it should be clear to the reader that the
fundamental principles of ITIL and Lean share many of the same themes:
alignment of value-added services based on customer-defined value, standardized work, PDCA problem solving, and continuous improvement
that, over time, creates sustainable business results.
Endnotes
8
Lean Software Development
Chapter Objectives
In this chapter we will explore Lean software development, also known as
Agile. We will:
Continue our examination of waste versus value, this time specifically in terms of software development.
Explore the importance of rigorous voice-of-customer techniques
when defining software requirements.
Demonstrate how many of the standard principles and tools of Lean
can trim waste and build flexibility into the software development
life cycle.
Examine how Lean manufacturing approaches such as kanban and heijunka (level) scheduling, along with demand management and a focus
on problem solving, revolutionize software development practices.
In 2001 a group of 17 visionaries signed the Agile Manifesto, establishing a simple set of principles:
We are uncovering better ways of developing software by doing it and helping others to do it. Through this work we have come to value:
Individuals and interactions over processes and tools
Working software over comprehensive documentation
Customer collaboration over contract negotiation
Responding to change over following a plan1
169
Lean Defect
Prevention
Defects
(design flaws)
Prevented
with
Rigorous
Voice of
Customer
Defects
Prevented
with Rapid
Collaborative
Integration
Prototyping
and Testing
Traditional Detection
and Rework
Defects
Discovered
During
Traditional
Coding and
Integration
Defects Discovered
During Traditional
Testing
Defects
Discovered
During
Traditional
Acceptance
Testing
Cost and
Business
Disruption
Caused by
Defects
Discovered
After
Release to
Production
Cost
Requirements
Analysis &
Design
Development
Testing
Release to
Production
Figure8.1
PDCA
Iteration 2
PDCA
Iteration 3
PDCA
Iteration 4
Release
PDCA
Iteration 5
PDCA
Iteration 6
Release
Figure8.3
* Each iteration tests a small set of features in an offline system, which are integrated into periodic
releases and deployed to the customer.
For more on PDCA, A3 thinking, and the scientific method, see Chapter 2.
Introduced by Shigeo Shingo at Toyota, this technique seeks to reduce the setup time of each
batch, making it more economical to produce smaller batches.
Continuous integration is a rapid PDCA cycle where each member of the development team integrates his or her code frequently, leading to multiple integrations each day. This approach detects
problems early, reducing rework, delivery time, cost, and risk.
FLOW
2 Points
(green)
4 Points
(green)
3 Points
(green)
3 Points
(green)
Story #22
Short Description
Story #2
Short Description
Story #11
Short Description
Story #27
Short Description
4 Points
(green)
Story #4
Short Description
3 Points
(green)
4 Points
BUG FIX (red)
8 Points
(green)
5 Points
(green)
Complete
Story #14
Short Description
Testing
Story #19
Short Description
12
Coding
Story #4
Short Description
11
Ready to Code
Story #12
Short Description
Points:
Pull
Story
5 Points
Story
2 Points
Story
4 Points
Story
2 Points
Story
7 Points
Story
3 Points
Backlog
Figure8.4
RELEASE SEQUENCE
Customer
Backlog
Release Iteration
Service Desk
Problems
and
Enhancement
Requests
Voice
of the
Customer
Kaizen Activity
Figure8.5
control and be addressed during the daily standup meetings (see also
Chapter 9 on Lean project management).
Ideally, the team should maintain just a few leading indicators (process
measures) that indicate the functioning state of the process, guiding proactive behavior, for example: backlog status, kanban boards, burndown
charts, and defect trend charts. When a deviation occurs in a leading indicator, the team should apply A3 thinking to solve the problem at the root
cause level.
The burndown chart is a common tool to keep the team on track, showing all tasks underway and their status, points or hours consumed, and
work remaining for each component. Ideally, the remaining points or
hours should represent a realistic estimate for the remaining work to be
done, rather than the initial estimate of total hours less time invested so
far, which may misrepresent the amount of remaining work. Significant
deviations between originally planned and final estimates should trigger
a root cause analysis in order to continuously improve estimate accuracy.
The burndown chart is often shown as two trend lines, one displaying the
planned schedule for the iteration, and the other showing actual progress.
The gap between the two lines is an effective early warning signal during
each days standup team meeting, helping the team respond quickly with
corrective and preventative action.
Endnotes
9
Applying Lean to Project Management
Chapter Objectives
An organizations project management capability directly impacts the
pace and success of its Lean transformation. In this chapter we will consider how the principles and tools of Lean can be applied to achieve better
project results while reinforcing Lean thinking throughout the enterprise,
as we explore:
The framework and benefits of conventional project management,
including portfolio management and the Project Management Office.
How Lean principles complement the strengths of traditional project management.
How Lean project management specifically applies to IT projects.
The importance of Lean project management competence as it applies
to Lean enterprise transformation.
193
For anyone who has been involved in a large-scale IT project, this list is
all too familiar. Before we consider how Lean complements and strengthens effective project management, lets briefly explore portfolio, program,
and project management.
Align
Strategic Alignment
Prioritization
Program Management
Plan
Project Management
Execute
r
de
Lea
Tactical Management
Escalation
m
Tea
m
ble
Pro
g
lvin
So
n
tio
lita
aci
&F
ard
nd
Sta
ls
kil
S
ean
rk
Wo
nt
me
loy
ep
yD
g
e
at
Str
Tactical
Strategic
Figure9.1
Is Lean a Program?
We often encounter organizations that refer to Lean and/or Six
Sigma as a program when describing their efforts to become a learning organization pursuing ongoing improvement. In our experience,
labeling continuous improvement a program is a mistake as it sends
the wrong message to the organization. A program is similar to a
project: it typically has a beginning, a middle, and an end point. But
continuous improvement is a never-ending journey of experimentation and learning. Labeling Lean a program is at best misleading
as some associates may choose to sit this one out, anticipating the
changes to be short-lived. We prefer to call them initiatives, efforts,
methods, or ways (as in the Lean way).
for a particular domain of knowledge and practice such as Lean or project
management.
Depending on the culture and project management capabilities already in
place, a PMO sometimes works in a consultative role providing project management training, tools, and coaching. Alternatively, PMOs may also actively
coordinate and manage project resources, ensuring project management
standard practices are followed, monitoring project status, and intervening
if a project appears to be heading for trouble. Often PMOs assist senior management with portfolio management and steering team activities as well.
Project managers either are members of the PMO and assigned to functional areas of the business as needed, or they are permanent members of
the business who look to the PMO for standards, support, and additional
resources. Figure9.2 compares each approach. A pool of project managers reporting to a central PMO strengthens consistency of project management standards and practices. On the other hand, project managers
directly assigned to functional areas develop a deeper level of understanding of business operations and stronger relationships with customers.
Operations which own permanently assigned project managers directly
control assignments and sometimes develop unique project management
tools and methods to meet localized needsa good thing when these bestpractice innovations are then shared with the rest of the organization.
When project managers are centrally located, there is often a challenge
for the PMO to balance demand and supply of project managers (demand
management), necessitating enterprise-wide trade-offs.Some would argue
Consistency of PM practices
Figure9.2
Initiate
Plan
Execute
Close
Monitor and
Control
Figure9.3
Control / Stability
Discovery / Flexibility
Project Planning
Requirements Management
Budget/Risk Management
Resource/Change Management
Figure9.4
Cost
Scope
Figure9.5
Figure9.6
Current State
Boundaries
In:
Out:
Voice of the Customer
Theme
A3
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
8)
Parking Lot
Target Outcome
Value Realized
When
Who
Who
Testing - What
Countermeasures to Test
Date:
Sponsor:
Coach:
Team Lead:
Team:
Due Date
Actual Outcome
Tactical execution
Strategic alignment /
Voice of the Customer
Task completion
Fixed
Evolving
PDCA, proactive
Stability
Focus
Daily Directive
Benefits Definition
Change / Risk Management
Emphasis
Figure9.7
more quickly and are better aligned with customer requirements. While
these principles may not be new to project management, they need to be
reemphasized. As shown in Figure 9.7, Lean enhances project management through its emphasis on alignment, customer-defined value, iterative learning, and agility.
Value Stream Mapping
The Initiate phase corresponds to the Plan stage of PDCA and the Define
stage of DMAIC. During the initiation of the project, Lean and Six Sigma
practitioners seek to understand voice of the customer to develop a
thorough understanding of stakeholder requirementsavoiding a common source of project failure.
Project managers have always been aware of the importance of stakeholder requirementsthis is not a new idea. The difference with Lean
project management is the emphasis that is placed on identifying and
validating customer requirements throughout the project life cycle.
* We discuss PDCA (Plan-Do-Check-Act) in Chapter 2 and Six Sigmas corresponding DMAIC
(Define-Measure-Analyze-Improve-Control) in Appendix B.
Lean PDCA
Six Sigma
DMAIC
Initiate
Plan
Define
Plan
Plan
Measure/Analyze
Execute
Monitor and
Control
Close
Do
Check/Act
Improve
Control
Act
Control
Traditional PM
Lean/Six Sigma
Tools
A3 / Voice of the
Customer / Gemba
PDCA / Root Cause
Analysis / VSM
Micro-PDCA
SMART Targets /
Statistical Analysis
Lessons Learned /
Hansei
Figure9.8
Five phases of project management, Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA), and Define-MeasureAnalyze-Improve-Control (DMAIC). VSM is value stream mapping. Lean/Six Sigma
Tools are explored in Appendix B.
ACT/
ADJUST
PLAN
ACT/
ADJ
CHECK
DO
CHECK
DO
Figure9.9
PLAN
Had the team performed root cause analysis, it may have discovered that there was a need for improving underlying business
processes and developing standard work before considering technology-based solutions (a common theme throughout this book).
The Fishbone Diagram
The fishbone* diagram is an effective tool to identify potential causes
of a problem. In the following diagram, the goal (improve IT service
request response time) is analyzed using categories to identify and
organize inputs and possible causesin this case, people, process,
technology, and information. Other categories might include measurements, information, policy, equipment, materials, maintenance,
* The fishbone diagram was invented by Kaoru Ishikawa in the 1960s and is also known as
an Ishikawa diagram or cause-and-effect diagram.
suppliers, systems, management, regulation, culture, and environment. Teams begin with a blank diagram showing only the fishbone
skeleton and the problem, event, or goal. The team then applies
brainstorming to fill in the diagram. Brainstorming is a problemsolving approach where a group defines a problem or goal and then
captures as many ideas as possible around the potential cause or
solution. The focus is on collecting ideas with no filtering, criticism,
or evaluation during the brainstorming session. The power of this
cause-and-effect analysis is that it sets the context for improvement,
so technology and automation are not the first reaction.
Process
People
Documentation
Training
Service Request
Process Definition
Provider
Tasks
Availability
Staffing
Skills
User
Tasks
Overload
Functionality
System Response
Time
Service
Request
System
Resource
Assignments
Accuracy
Performance
Server Uptime
Maintenance
Technology
Alerts
Project Backlog
Report
Lengthy IT
Service
Request
Response
Time Causes
Business
Disruption
Visibility
At-Risk
Requests
Information
Once the team has identified potential causes, and themes begin
to emerge, it begins to envision potential improvements, develop a
future-state value stream map, set targets, prioritize efforts, and take
action.
data helps teams to truly understand how information, work, and materials flow to the customer to deliver value. The current and future state value
stream maps are updated throughout the project as facts are gathered and
comprehension deepens.
Before project execution, the team gathers baseline data for all targets,
providing a fact-based starting point from which to assess project gains
By the time the team has reached the Execution phase, predictions have been
made, and potential countermeasures have been developed, tested, and prioritized. In addition, baseline data have been gathered and measurements are in
place to objectively assess the impact of the improvements about to be made.
During implementation, project teams are constantly responding to change and
making adjustments. What is often missing is a closed-loop feedback discipline
to assess the impact of actions taken, validate results, and provide the basis for
future actions. During these phases, Lean project management employs rapidcycle micro-PDCA to accelerate problem solving. Ideally, each successive cycle
is faster and more focused than the last. Figure9.10 illustrates this relationship.
* Six Sigma uses hypothesis testing to determine the probability that the correlation between
dependent and independent variables is due to random chance.
Micro-PDCA
CHECK
(Do / Check
testing cycles)
PLAN
DO
PDCA Level of
Effort
ACT
Plan
CHECK
DO
PLAN
PDCA Level
of Effort
Execute
ACT
CHECK
DO
PLAN
Monitor &
Control
Figure9.10
Planned
Activities
Plan
Missing Feedback
No Act/Adjust
Step
Plan
Do
Check
Unforeseen
Events,
Change
Act: Gather
Feedback,
Assess
and Adjust
Act
Do
Check
Reaction/
Response
Reactive
Proactive
Figure9.11
The left side of the illustration depicts the reactive approach to unforeseen events and the impact of unanalyzed change. Without feedback
and intentional evaluation, the energy of the team is spent responding
to unanticipated events. These projects experience a self-inflicted chain
of reactive activity (unplanned work), distracting the team from delivering value, causing delays, and increasing costs. Project management
frequently includes a formal assessment of results, but this is often at the
end of the project. Our experience suggests that the degree to which project teams proactively gather feedback and assess the impact of change
during the project varies greatly. Lean addresses this issue head-on with
micro-PDCA.
On the right side, proactive Lean execution, measurement, and control
are shown. Based on the scientific method, the appropriate next step is
determined by observed feedback. Simply by closing the loop, reflection
and learning take place. Projects that apply this rigor stay focused, making
informed adjustments based on the facts.
Close
The final phase of project management hinges on the acceptance of project deliverables by the system users, process owners, customers, and other
stakeholders. A review meeting usually is held to identify lessons learned
what went well, what challenges were encountered, and what was learned
Endnotes
Section IV
Leadership Roadmap
10
Leading the Lean IT Transformation
Chapter Objectives
In this chapter we will examine the nature of transformational Lean leadership, effective management systems, and the information systems that
support them. We will:
Examine the importance of clear strategic intent in guiding a Lean
transformation.
Explore the Lean management state of mind.
Establish the importance of leader standard work, and the essential
Lean management systems from an IT perspective.
Learn how to focus Lean IT change efforts on those factors that drive
innovation and competitive advantage.
Lean
Escape
Trajectory
Results
Management
Systems and
Principles
Tools
t
ec
oj m
r
t P tu
lo en
i
P om
M
Time
Figure10.1
should launch with a focus on problem-solving tools, then bounce off the
atmosphere established by successful pilot projects (see Figure10.1), giving
the organization time, momentum, and confidence to develop sustaining
systems and principles.
Strategic Intent
Research consistently shows that in most companies strategic intent is
not clearly articulated, and this leads to a disconnect between strategic goals and daily activities. The better an organization communicates
strategy in clear, actionable, and measurable terms, the more successfully the Lean transformation can focus on driving change where it matters most.
There are many perspectives and approaches to strategy, but it all comes
down to a few simple questions. How does an organization define and
S
U
P
P
L
I
E
R
S
Strategic
Planning
Strategy
Deployment
Demand
Management
Business Process
Management
Project, Program,
and Portfolio
Management
Systems/
Program/
Product Mgmt
Product and
Service
Design and
Development
Sales and
Order Capture
Procure and
Build/ Service
Delivery
Service and
Support
P
U
L
L
C
U
S
T
O
M
E
R
S
Figure10.2
Demand Management
As we explored in Chapter 5, every value stream should engage stakeholders to continuously level demand and balance capacity. The cadence of this
balancing act should be synchronized with the delivery cycles of the particular industry, but generally the demand management process occurs on
a standard monthly cycle. While demand management originally evolved
in supply chain industries (as sales and operations planning [S&OP]), the
fundamentals are now being successfully applied across many industries.
After all, what organization does not need to balance demand from customers with their capacity to deliver?
When a disciplined demand management collaboration process takes
hold, value stream flow is stabilized (mura reduced) and resource overload is avoided (muri reduced). Under these conditions, departments and
teams experience a reasonable workload, so they can focus on the development of people and on the design of work processes that flow smoothly
without interruption (muda reduced). Once the discipline and cadence
of demand management become routine, organizations can identify and
respond to changes quickly with limited disruption to operations, suppliers, and customers.
As Lean practitioners learned in the manufacturing world decades ago,
just-in-time delivery can only be sustained when demand is reasonably
Drive Improvement
and Innovation
Demand Management to
Create Flow
Standard Work
A3 Thinking
Value Stream
Mapping
Leader
Standard Work
A3 Thinking
Value Stream
Mapping
Leader
Standard Work
Enterprise Value
Stream Oversight
Figure10.3
Teams and
Individuals
Managers
Execs
Lean
Focus
Strategy
Deployment
(Hoshin Kanri)
Execute Strategy
Business
Focus
Information
Systems Focus
Integrating Lean IT
It is not enough to just do your best or work hard. You must know what to
work on.
Dr. W. Edwards Deming
Across many industries, billions of dollars are spent each year on IT investments that do not add value or offer differentiation to the customer. What
actions can IT leadership take to redirect funding and focus from these
routine and wasteful activities toward enabling innovation and competitive advantage?
To address this question, in 2007 the IT Process Institute* conducted a
survey, illustrating the degree of IT strategic integration in quantitative
terms. Their methodology identified three IT archetypes:
Utility providers: They provide primary shared services and infrastructure to support basic information management applications.
* See www.itpi.org; this research was built upon earlier research conducted by Forrester Research
and McKinsey.
51%
70% of IT Budget
under IT Control
Process
Optimizer
47%
66% of IT Budget
under IT Control
Revenue
Enabler
57% of IT Budget
under IT Control
31%
34%
Figure10.4
13%
35%
33%
14%
33%
Common
infrastructure,
shared services
Business unit
objectives, process
improvement
New products,
services, markets
Endnotes
1. Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence, Model and application guidelines, 3rd ed.
(Logan: Utah State University, Jon M. Huntsman School of Business, 2009), 1, www.
shingoprize.org.
2. Gary Hamel and C.K. Prahalad, Strategic intent, Harvard Business Review, May
June 1989, 6376.
3. Stephen Covey, Shingo Prize Award ceremony report, Huntsman Alumni Magazine,
Fall 2009, 12.
4. Ed Oakley and Doug Krug, Enlightened leadership (New York: Fireside, 1991), 89.
5. Jim Collins, Good to great (New York: HarperCollins, 2001), 13, 29.
6. James Womack, The mind of the Lean manager, Lean Enterprise Institute Electronic
Newsletter, July 30, 2009.
7. Robert S. Kaplan and David P. Norton, Mastering the management system, Harvard
Business Review, January 2007, 6277.
8. itSMF USA Advisory Board, Introduction to IT governance, Advisory Board Paper,
July 13, v. 1.0.3, 1 (Pasadena, CA: itSMF USA, 2005).
9. Jeffrey K. Liker, The Toyota way, (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004).
10. Weill and Ross, IT governance, (Harvard Business School Press, 2004). vii.
11. Kurt Milne and Laurie Orlov, Know thy self: Improving an IT organizations ability to
drive business success (Eugene, OR: IT Process Institute, 2008).
12. Milne and Orlov, Know thy self.
11
A Lean IT Roadmap
PROCESS
Alienation
SWEET
SPOT
Frustration
People and Process
without Technology
Frustration and inefficiency
High cost of operation
TECHNOLOGY
Automated
Chaos
PEOPLE
Figure11.1
Declare victory too soon; the higher you climb, the harder the wind
blows. Just when a transformation seems to be taking hold, the
problems become tougher and entrenched resistance can become
stronger.
Give up or let down your guard. Problems are clever, old habits die
slowly. Lean is not a project, or a program, its a new way of thinking
that doesnt go away.
Get beyond the tactical and emphasize strategic value to the business. Develop a
complete roadmap for the transformation, clearly articulate everyones role and
contribution, explain that it will be difficult but attainable. As Dr. Stephen Covey
says, begin with the end in mind.
Communicate often and through multiple channels, promote success stories, openly
share lessons learned. Celebrate failures as well as successes to eliminate fear and
encourage PDCA.
Start with pilot projects that are important, but not your biggest challenges.
Apply A3 Thinking and PDCA to daily work and decision-making. Develop future
leaders that think and act Lean. Emphasize business and IT partnership in all
management systems and improvement projects.
3. Create a vision
Figure11.2
Educate and communicate with all managers, key stakeholders and subject matter
experts, ensure you have critical mass to succeed, and address all concerns.
Cultivate emerging leaders outside the existing management hierarchy.
Under-invest in the factors that will ensure these initial efforts are
successful: education on principles, training on tools, coaching, teams,
measures.
Help everyone understand that the Lean Enterprise cannot afford a non-Lean IT
organization, and the key to IT alignment and agility is Lean Thinking
IT Leadership Should:
Change Stage
Strategy
Establish Leadership Vision and Consensus
This effort is usually driven by an executive champion, who initially
establishes a sense of urgency; often called the burning platform, this is a
compelling argument that the organization cannot afford not to change
in a fundamental way. Consensus is needed on underlying values and
principles that will never change. Build on existing beliefs within the
enterprise when possibleif too many new principles and values are
suddenly introduced, it may cause the existing culture to reject them as
* In this case, the rules are Lean management systems supported by leader standard work.
Start here
Establish
Leadership Vision
and Consensus
Execution
Strategy
Articulate Strategic
Intent and Drivers
Planning
Consolidate Gains
& Build Momentum
Define and
Communicate the
Plan
Measure Results,
Assess Understanding
and Buy-in
Build a Lean
Leadership Team
Create a
Basic Toolkit
Launch Pilot
Kaizen Projects
Plan
Figure11.3
contrived or disingenuous, just another flavor of the month. Where possible, seek to establish and constantly reinforce those timeless Lean principles described in Chapter 2. Senior management should form a Lean
transformation steering team representing executive stakeholders from
across the enterprise, including strong IT leadership involvement. We
also advise that IT leadership form their own Lean transformation steering team, to oversee the IT organizations transformation and ensure its
integration with the overall enterprise transformation effort. This is especially critical if the business has been on the Lean journey for some time,
and IT is just starting.
Develop within the management team a clear understanding of the
importance of a Lean management system, and leader standard work, particularly repeatable behavior, accountability, and cadence. Coach members of the management team, since invariably some will more readily
Planning
Define and Communicate the Transformation Plan
First, a plan must be developed that identifies targets, and the timing and
sequence of activities, while anticipating resource constraints and interdependencies. Although we earlier stressed that an overly prescriptive
or rigid framework is inappropriate, nevertheless a plan is necessary to
Execution
Launch Pilot Kaizen Projects
Choose meaningful problems whose success is achievable; dont tackle the
hardest problems first. Focus on those areas of the organization that are
most likely to demonstrate early support for the Lean transformation. Use
initial pilots to standardize communications, training, and the use of basic
tools and measurements. Develop your internal coaching skills, demonstrate early wins, and promote meaningful stories and lessons learned to
spread interest and encourage wider adoption.
Invest in Enterprise-Wide Infrastructure
While initial pilots are underway, continue developing the coaching team,
while extending the infrastructure (tested and evolved during pilots,
guided by the Lean CoE) to support expanding Lean efforts: a website,
virtual and physical libraries, a knowledge base, collaboration and knowledge sharing tools, measurement standards and templates, communication tools, skills tracking, education and training materials, and so on.
Measure Results and Assess Understanding and Buy-In
Measuring and openly communicating observations, trends, and
results send a clear message that the Lean transformation is a strategic
Endnotes
1. Steve Bell, Lean enterprise systems: Using IT for continuous improvement (Hoboken,
NJ: Wiley, 2006), 373.
2. John P. Kotter, Leading change: Why transformation efforts fail, Harvard Business
Review, MarchApril 1995, 110.
3. Earll Murman, Thomas Allen, and Kirkor Bozdogan, Lean enterprise value: Insights
from MITs Lean Aerospace Initiative (New York: Palgrave, 2002), 87.
4. Thomas J. Peters and Robert H. Waterman, Jr., In search of excellence: Lessons from
Americas best-run companies (New York: Warner, 1982), 322.
5. Jim Collins, Good to great (New York: Harper Collins, 2001).
Section V
Lean IT Topic
Voice of the Customer
Waste
Kaizen - PDCA / DMAIC - Problem Solving
Cross-functional Teams
Standard Work
Problem Solving/Root Cause Analysis
Value Stream Mapping
Measurements
Quality at the Source
Flow/Pull
Systems Thinking
Strategy Deployment/Hoshin Kanri
Leveling Demand/Heijunka
Visual Controls
5S Workplace Organization
Lean Software Development
E RP
Barr
y-We
hm
ller Lea
n and
way
-L
alth
Mgm
t
way Fo
s Doc
- Virt
ual 5
Con-
cus
e
d
V
alue
Strea
ms
Con-
Ran
are D
ev
ean S
oftw
Grou
p He
ality
r Qu
ca s
Steel
d-O
rde
Inge
rsoll
Mgm
t
Data
e - Pr
oduc
t
ent
Virgi
n
ia
loym
ta
S
t
rateg
y D ep
Toyo
Lab O
rd
ers
Maso
n-
Case Studies
Strategic Planning
Catchball
Care Delivery
Health Plan Administration
Division Planning
Catchball
Operations and
Improvements are
driven by Value Stream
Outcomes
Functional Planning
Quarterly
Planning
Cycle
Monthly
Execution
Cycle
Catchball
Business drives
change and
prioritizes efforts
by value, IT
pace regulates
capacity
BACKLOG
Business
Team
Members
IT Software
Development,
Support and
Maintenance
IT Infrastructure and
shared services (ITIL)
Requirements
change:
provider
contracts,
regulations,
etc.
Service Desk
Production
Issues
Figure 12.1
Deal with quality issues (defects), improving the overall order entry accuracy and a reduction in variation.
Measure and Analyze
Once this knack was discovered, it was captured, standardized, documented, and spread throughout the department through a mentoring program. Creating standard work enabled the process to initially drop defects
by 50 percent within the first six months of the project. Key tools utilized
were control charts, which were used to identify patterns and trends over
time, and Pareto analysis.
Process specialists were also engaged to determine where additional
information systems improvements could be made. These individuals
made many suggestions on ways to mistake-proof the order entry software.
By engaging the operators in a cross-functional team, specific intelligence
was built into the software, making it easier to enter the order correctly the
first time.
Early involvement by the IT organization, establishing a collaborative relationship between IT and the operators, enabled rapid and simple
enhancements to existing software. Look-up tables and search functions
were added to the system, which helped order entry operators find key
0.07
Before
0.06
Individual Value
2
1
A
After
0.05
0.04
0.03
1
0.02
0.01
UCL = 0.03978
X = 0.03332
LCL = 0.02685
0.0062
0.00
5-
ec
26
ec
-Ja
16
b
Fe
6-
eb
-F
27
ar
20
Week
r
Ap
10
ay
1-
ay
22
n n
Ju Ju
5- 19-
Figure 12.2
information much easier and faster. IT was also able to add enhancements
to mistake-proof key error sources in the entry process.
As a result of these efforts, defects have been reduced dramatically. The
process itself is approaching a 70-percent reduction in defects, moving
from 0.5 sigma to 3.53 sigma. Customer satisfaction has also improved
tremendously.
Control
A plan was put into place to help sustain the gains. Improvements in quality,
stabilization, and consistency enabled the effective use of traditional Lean
tools for continuous improvement efforts now underway. (See Figure12.2)
Lessons Learned
Early involvement of IT resources with the inclusion of operators and support personnel in a combined team effort, was instrumental to our overall
success. Understanding the process, involving those who work the process, and seeking outside advice were vital to making the process better.
Having the discipline to adhere to the DMAIC method generated significant gains, delivering value to our customers.
S-Plan (Q1)
S-Do (Q14)
S-Check (Q14)
S-Act (Q14)
IT Solution B
O
O
IT Solution C
Table12.3
The IT Solution Roadmap
Year 1
Business Objective / KPI
per Hoshin System
Strategy 1
Year 2
Year 3
Year 4
Year 5
IT Solution A
IT
Solution
B
IT Solution C
Strategy 2
IT
Solution
B
Strategy 3
IT
Solution
B
Legend:
IT Solution C
Strong Support
Some Support
Boards and IT investment committees are normally interested in aggregate value for money for IT investment, so it is easier to report investment
at the rolled-up group hoshin level rather than as a project-by-project fragmented view. Having an IT service management approach to organize how
business objectives combine to support group hoshin enables TMCAs IT
division to communicate the value-for-money story at the group, operating arm, division, or project level.
307
* Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) is a structured approach to problem solving which applies the scientific method: observation, development of a tentative description of cause and effect (hypothesis),
prediction, testing, and evaluation. Also known as Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA). For a discussion
of PDCA, see Appendix B.
Cost of quality includes the costs of prevention, appraisal, and internal and external failure.
Endnotes
1. Patrick Graupp and Robert Wrona, The TWI workbook: Essential skills for supervisors
(New York: Productivity Press, 2006).
2. W. Edwards Deming, Out of the crisis (Cambridge: Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Center for Advanced Engineering Study, 1982).
3. Armand Feigenbaum, Quality control: Principles, practice, and administration (New
York: McGraw-Hill, 1951).
4. Joseph Juran, Managerial breakthrough (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964); and Joseph
Juran, Juran on quality by design (New York: Free Press, 1992).
5. Henry Ford, Today and tomorrow (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1926).
6. Eli Goldratt, The goal (Great Barrington, MA: North River Press, 1984).
7. James P. Womack, Daniel T. Jones, and Daniel Roos, The machine that changed the
world (New York: HarperCollins, 1990).
8. James P. Womack and Daniel T. Jones, Lean thinking (New York: Free Press, 1996),
1626.
313
Focus
DMAIC and PDCA are equally effective process improvement methodologies. While DMAIC offers a more formal project deployment model
applying additional rigor in the define stage, PDCA is a very effective
problem-solving method that can be applied with less formality and overhead. Both have their appropriate place in continuous improvement and
should be chosen according to the scope, cost, complexity, and risk of the
undertaking.
A major difference between Lean and Six Sigma is their principal focus:
Six Sigma emphasizes quality through controlling process variation, while
Leans primary focus is flow attained from eliminating non-value-added
activities (waste). In most organizations, the vast majority of improvement
opportunities are found in wasteful business processes. It is not surprising
that many companies discover that focusing on waste (not process variation) is the best place to begin their improvement efforts. Lean quickly
prepares organizations to address obvious low-hanging fruit improvement
opportunities that are relatively easy to achieve and deliver a noticeable
impact. Harvesting these opportunities creates early wins, preparing
employees for more challenging projects.
After non-value-added activities are removed from a process, it is easier
to identify high-value problems deserving rigorous attention.
Roles
In Six Sigma, projects are typically led by certified black belts and staffed
with green belts.* Specialists drive improvement activity and are thoroughly
trained in improvement tools and methods. However, the people closest to the
work may lack a sense of ownership and responsibility to solve problems while
waiting for the Six Sigma experts to arrive (generally speaking, Six Sigma
* Black belt and green belt are Six Sigma designations. Black belts have traditionally completed
advanced training (46 months) and successfully completed two large-dollar-value projects. They
provide training and mentoring to green belts and other employees. Black belts work full time on
Six Sigma projects. Green belts have received basic training in Six Sigma (often 5 days) and support
black belts by providing project facilitation and guidance. Certification is offered by a number of
professional organizations, universities, and private companies.
Project Selection
Because Six Sigma projects make use of trained black belts (a finite
resource), projects are limited. Six Sigma projects are regulated based
on alignment with organizational goals, risk, and return on investment
(ROI). It is not uncommon for Six Sigma projects to target annualized
* Kaizen is ongoing continuous improvement of a value stream (system kaizen) or a single process
(process kaizen). In general, system kaizen is the primary focus of management, while process
kaizen is the responsibility of associates formed into teams.
For more information on Kaizen, see Kaizen: The Key to Japans Competitive Success by Masaaki
Imai.
Complementary Coexistence
Can Lean and Six Sigma coexist in one organization? Absolutely! Many
companies today have a Lean Six Sigma program. In the final analysis,
Six Sigma and Lean complement each other by providing the tools and
methods necessary for sustained improvement throughout the enterprise.
Our experience shows that Lean is often the entry point due to its primary focus on waste, low initial startup costs, company-wide participation, and rapid results. Initial Lean efforts often focus on achieving quick
wins. These early successes foster support and enthusiasm for additional
improvement efforts. Once the initial gains have been realized, companies
recognize the need to address more challenging constraints and process
variation. These complex problems often require disciplined analysis and
formal project management. This is where Six Sigma provides the quantitative tools and thorough deployment methodology needed.
On the other hand, several of our clients began their journey with Six
Sigma, finding the structure, discipline, and focus a good fit with their
established culture. After they successfully created a foundation of continuous improvement with Six Sigma, they expanded the effort to all
associates by introducing Lean to the rest of the company. Lean became
the general approach to improvement, while Six Sigma was applied when
specifically suited to the problem at hand. Whether your organization
embarks on its process improvement journey by employing Lean or Six
Sigma, it is important to understand that both these improvement methodologies are complementary and have their appropriate place.
* Kaikaku is breakthrough and radical improvement (initiated by senior management), as contrasted with kaizen, which is gradual, continuous, and often initiated by the people closest to the
work.
Appendix C:
Information Wastes
Following is a list of information wastes we have compiled during our
own practice, along with input from many IT professionals we have worked
with over the years. We hope this list helps you learn to see waste in your
own work environmentthe first step toward eliminating it.
This is by no means a complete list, and well continue to update it on
our website: www.steadyimprovement.com. The list is available for download and free distribution.
If you would like to submit your own examples of information waste,
please send them to info@steadyimprovement.com
Inventory
Backlog accumulating in electronic and physical inboxes
Old or obsolete electronic and physical files and messages that should
be stored, disposed, or recycled
Clutter: physical and virtual disorganization wherever work is done
or knowledge is stored and shared
Endless spreadsheets and other productivity enhancing documents
that encourage local optimization while fragmenting the overall process, increasing the number of delays, handoffs, and errors
Excess information across local drives, shared drives, SharePoint
sites, data warehouses; duplication of the same data in multiple forms
(e.g., electronic and paper)
Sending attachments rather than links, which creates multiple
versions of a document (also causing version control and security
problems)
Work waiting to be reviewed, approved, and forwarded
Software thats purchased but never deployed
Unnecessary, unclear, incorrect, obsolete, or unused documentation
Projects and programs that are not being considered but are still on
the backlog
319
Appendix D: IT Service
Desk A3 Example
329
Index
A
Acceptable practices, 52
Accountability, 122, 219
Accounting, Lean, 140142, 167, see also
Costs
Acquisition, rapid, 135136
Actionable information, 72, 219
Activity vs. productivity, 123, 215
Adaptability, roadmap, 264265
Agile Manifesto, 169170, 175
Agility
defined, 11, 170
executive review, 118
flow and balance, 103
flow and pull, 102104
information, 7980
level scheduling, 109
vs. Lean, software development, 170
Alignment, see also Integration and
alignment
business, 810
executive review, 118
haphazard, 111
horizontal, 137
misalignment, 68
vertical, 137
vs. integration, 94
Analyze (DMAIC), 286, see also DMAIC
approach
Anchor-draggers, 261
Andons, 134
A New Model for IT Demand
Management, 111
Anthill, wisdom, 230
Approaches
roadmap, 253254
software development life cycle,
177178
Assemble to order (ATO), 102
A3 thinking
form vs. thinking, 210
fundamentals, 3637, 63
ITIL and cloud computing, 160
B
Backlog grooming, 183
Balanced scorecards, see also Scorecards
effective measures, 87
strategic intent, 231
Toyota Australia case study, 292293
Balancing
flow and pull, 102104
IT demand management, 116117
Barry-Wehmiller case study, 269271
Batch-and-queue waste, 173
Bechtel, 91
Beginners mind, 35
Begin with end in mind, 26
Benchmarking
compliance, 8788
effective measurement use, 8588
fundamentals, 8385
Best practices
enterprise software applications, 77
fundamentals, 8283
process models, 52
Boeing, 105
Bottom-up processes, 52
BPR, see Business process reengineering
(BPR)
Brainstorming, 218
333
334 Index
Break-fix responses, 156
Budget constraints, 6, see also Accounting,
Lean; Costs
Burndown charts, 188, 283
Burning platform, 47, 4852, 254
Business
alignment, 810
IT perceptions/concerns, 34
Business Agility, 80
Business intelligence, performance
measurement, 133135
Business partnership
cause-and-effect diagram, 60
challenges, 4852
comparisons, 57
data quality, 55
doing Lean IT, 65
environmental waste, 6163
excess information, 53
fundamentals, 4546
health care information quality, 56
information waste, 5255
Ishikawa diagram, 60
lack of Lean focus, 4647
Lean vs. traditional IT, 49
legacy systems, 5051
overprocessing, 54
performing Lean IT, 65
process maturity models, 5152
recognition of, 55, 5859
tools of Lean IT, 6364
Business process improvement, 6970
Business process improvement (BPM)
agility, 7980
benchmarking, 8385
compliance, 8788
coordinating function, 7074
effective measurement use, 8588
efficency-flexibility trade-off, 7980
enterprise software applications, 7779
fundamentals, 8889
information value and waste,
intangible nature, 7482
process vs. practice, 8083
systems perspective, 7576
Business process management, 237238
Business process reengineering (BPR), 15
Buy-in assessment, 260262
C
Capability Maturity Model (CMM), 83,
171, see also Process maturity
models
Capacity planning
demand management, 112
human potential, 91
IT demand management, 115116
Capital, creativity before, 70, 203
Case studies
Barry-Wehmiller, 269271
Con-Way, 271279
Group Health, 279284
Ingersoll Rand security technologies,
284288
Steelcase, 288291
Toyota Australia, 291300
Virginia Mason Medical Center,
301305
Catalog, common language, 157
Catchball, 137
Cause-and-effect diagram
information waste, 60
project management, 216, 217218
Cellular organization, 64, 155
Center of Excellence (CoE)
collaborative workspaces, 127, 129
infrastructure investment, 260
Project Management Office, 198199,
205
team building, 258
Challenges
business partnership, 4852
constancy of purpose, 1819
culture, 31
flow, pull, and just in time, 29
proactive behavior, 24
pursuit of perfection, 23
quality at the source, 27
respect for people, 21
systems thinking, 28
traditional software development,
171174
voice of the customer, 26
Changes
adapting to, 264265
agent for, 71
Index 335
be what you wish to see, 19
change-release, percentages, 164
control, 139
leadership, 10
percentage of successful, 163
social norms, 22
CHAOS Report, 48
Chasing the Rabbit, 132
CIO Magazine, 111, 165, 190
Clear communication, 74
Closeout phase, 221222
Cloud computing, 10, see also ITIL and
cloud computing
Collaboration solution, 303305
Collaborative workspaces, 124125, 127,
129
Command and control, 14
Communication
breakdown, shared resources, 152
management systems, 123124
most common failure, 258
organization and approach, 179
roadmap, 256258
three Cs, 74
Comparisons
A3 form vs. thinking, 210
authority vs. responsibility, 202
information waste, 57
IT waste, 57
Lean accounting vs. traditional, 142
Lean vs. traditional IT, 49
manufacturing waste, 57
office waste, 57
process vs. practice, 8083
program management vs. Lean
initiative, 166, 199
value vs. features, 213
Complementary coexistence, 317
Complete communication, 74
Complexity
business view, 4
information wastes, 325326
necessary vs. unnecessary, 7
Compliance, benchmarking, 8788, see
also Regulatory requirements
Consensus, 254256
Constancy of purpose, 1720, 230
Continuous improvement, see also Kaizen
engagement, 1415
historical developments, 1316,
307312
integration, 15
scientific management, 1314
service, 158
timeline, 16
Continuous integration, 176177
Control, see Monitor and Control phase
Control (DMAIC), 287, see also DMAIC
approach
Con-Way
document management virtual 5S,
271273
focused value streams, 274279
kaizen event, 59
Coordinating function, 7074
Correct communication, 74
Corrections, 35, 86
Cost of change curve, 172, 175
Costs, 4, 151, see also Accounting, Lean;
Budget constraints
Counterproduction
information systems, 98
traditional cost-accounting, 141
Cowboy culture, 166
Creating a Lean Culture, 122
Creativity before capital, 70, 203
Critical differentiators aproach, 78
Critical-to-quality requirements, 26
Culture
cowboy/hero, 166
fundamentals, 3033
people leading change, 249
proactive behavior, 24
Current state
focused value streams, case study,
274279
Group Health case study, 279
Customers, see also Voice of the customer
requirements, 179180
software development life cycle,
186187
Cycles, IT demand management, 112118,
see also Life cycle
336 Index
D
Daily accountability, 122
Daily kaizen, 41
Danaher Corporation, 136
Dashboards
organization and approach, 179
performance measures, 133135, 139
Data quality
business view, 4
information waste, 55
IT view, 5
Data types, 139
Deceptive activities, 24
Decision rights, 239, see also Authority
Decision support, 4
Defects, 324325
Define (DMAIC), 287, see also DMAIC
approach
Delays, 322323
Deliverables, 203
Demand
exceeds capacity, 111112
planning, 112, 114115
Demand management
feedback loop, 113
fundamentals, 64
management systems, 236237
software development life cycle,
181183
Dependence, excessive, 152
Design, service, 158
Design choices, 179
Digital nervous system, 122
Discipline, 122
DMAIC approach
Ingersoll Rand security technologies,
case study, 285287
project management, 213222
Document management
case study, 271273
obsolete, 130
Does IT Matter? Information Technology
and the Corrosion of Competitive
Advantage, 165
Done state, 182183
Drivers, 256
Drumbeat, 181
E
Economies of flow, 154
Education, 130131
Efficency-flexibility trade-off, 7980
Electronic document waste, 125
Electronic kanban, 105
Electronic Medical Records (EMR), 56
EMR, see Electronic Medical Records
(EMR)
End, beginning at, 26
End-of-pipe outcomes, 86
Engagement
continuous improvement, 1415
IT view, 5
Engineer to order (ETO), 102
Enterprise software applications, 7779,
see also Software development
Enterprise value streams, 73
Enterprise-wide infrastructure, 260
Environmental issues
information wastes, 6163, 326327
triple bottom line, 62
Errors, 324325
ETO, see Engineer to order
Events, kaizen
Con-way Enterprise Services, 59
fundamentals, 41
Excellence as habit, 33
Excess information, 53
Execution, 183184, 186
Execution disconnect, 201
Execution phase
project management, 219
roadmap, 260264
Executive review, 117118
Executives, Lean management levels, 242
Experiential information, 122
External benchmarking, 85
External customers, 179
Extreme programming, 170
F
Failures, respect for people, 2122
Features vs. value, 213
Index 337
Feedback, 138
Firefighting
IT view, 5
proactive behavior, 2425
pursuit of perfection, 2223
Fishbone diagram, see Cause-and-effect
diagram
5S method
document management, case study,
271273
fundamentals, 43
knowledge management, 127, 130
Five Whys method, 216, 217
Fix-it-later approach
information value and waste, 74
quality at the source, 27
Flavor of the month, 23, 255
Flexibility, see Efficency-flexibility tradeoff
Flow
economies of, 154
interruptions, 152
IT demand management, 115
kaizen, 40
Flow and pull
agility, 102104
balance, 102104
balancing, 116117
capacity planning, 115116
cycle, 112118
demand exceeds capacity, 111112
demand planning, 112, 114115
executive review, 117118
flow impact, 115
fundamentals, 9799
IT demand management, 109118
kanban, 104107
Lean principles, 2930
lessons learned, 97118
level schedule, creating, 107109
material requirements planning,
100101
Flowchart, Lean IT, viii
Focus, 315
Focused factory, 275
Focused value streams, case study
current state, 274275
fundamentals, 274
G
Gains consolidation, 262264
Gemba
fundamentals, 63
Lean stress, 214
operational dashboards, 133134
standardized work, 42
Genbutsu, 63
Genchi, 63
Geography, 139
Goals of improvement, 143
Good to Great, 232233, 257
Google, 177
Governance, 238240
GreatServices, Inc, 194195, 207, 212
Green Intentions, 62
Green issues, see Environmental issues
Group Health
current state, 280
fundamentals, 279280
future state, 280281
future steps, 282284
progress to date, 281282
H
Hands, hiring for, 14
Hansei, 22, 222, 232
Harvard Business Review, 54, 92, 216, 231,
234
Health care information quality, 56
Heijunka, see Level schedule, creating
Heijunka box, 107109, 184, 186
Help/service desk, 129130
Hero culture, 166
Historical developments, 1315, 307312
Horizontal alignment, 9, 137
338 Index
Hoshin system case study, see also
Strategic deployment
hoshin kanri evolution, 293294
IT as customer, 298
purpose, 300
How to Instill Agile Development
Practices among Your IT Team:,
190
Human potential, see also People
freeing up capacity, 91
wastes, 123, 326
Humility, 22
I
IBM Global Services, 175
Importance, 18, 144
Important and Urgent, 24
Important but Not Urgent, 24
Improve (DMAIC), 286287, see also
DMAIC approach
Information
actionable, 72
agility, 7980
efficency-flexibility trade-off, 7980
enterprise software applications, 7779
fundamentals, 7475
obsolete, 130
overload, business view, 4
process vs. practice, 8083
quality, 3, 56
shared, system services, 123
systems perspective, 7576
value, incorporation, 46
Information boxes, 59, 61
Information systems, 3, 139140
Information Technology Advisory
Committee, 171
Information wastes
cause-and-effect diagram, 60
comparisons, 57
data quality, 55
defects, 324325
delays, 322323
environmental wastes, 326327
errors, 324325
excess information, 53
health care information quality, 56
Index 339
constancy of purpose, 18
culture, 3031
flow, pull, and just in time, 29
proactive behavior, 24
pursuit of perfection, 2223
quality at the source, 27
respect for people, 21
systems thinking, 28
voice of the customer, 26
IT demand management
balancing, 116117
capacity planning, 115116
cycle, 112118
demand exceeds capacity, 111112
demand planning, 112, 114115
executive review, 117118
flow impact, 115
ITIL and cloud computing, see also Cloud
computing
A3 problem solving, 160
cloud computing, 164165
functional silo, 152155
fundamentals, 149150
integrated processes, 157160
license management, 161162
measurement, 163164
quality, 150151
quality at the source, 159160, 162
security management, 161162
services adoption, 165168
services management, 156164
standard work, 162163
value-adding service center, 152155
voice of the customer, 160
ITIL Version 3 service life cycle model,
158, 160
ITs contribution, 9395
IT service desk A3 example, 330331
IT solution evolution, 294295
IT waste comparison, 57
J
Just in time, 2930, 101
K
Kaikaku, 42, 263
L
Laboratory order process, 301303
Language, common, 156157
Languages, foreign, 4
Launching transformation, 227228
Leadership
change leadership, 10
leading transformation, 227247
Lean IT roadmap, 249265
state of mind, 232234
Leader standard work, 122, 242
Leading Change, 249
Lean enterprise, 222223
Lean IT
alignment, 810
business concerns/perceptions, 34
defined, xixxxi, 910
forward movement, 1011
importance of, 3
lack of focus on, 4647
misalignment, 68
perceptions/concerns, 56
performing, 65
tools, 6364
value creation, 810
vs. traditional IT, 49
Lean principles
constancy of purpose, 1720
culture, 3033
flow, pull, and just in time, 2930
fundamentals, 1617
proactive behavior, 2426
340 Index
pursuit of perfection, 2223
pyramid, 17, 18, 31
quality at the source, 27
respect for people, 2122
systems thinking, 2728
thinking, 253
voice of the customer, 26
Lean thinking, 203205, 207213
Lean Thinking, 9, 15
Lean tools
A3 form, 3637
daily kaizen, 41
events, kaizen, 41
5 S method, 43
fundamentals, 36
kaikaku, 42
kaizen, 4041
Plan-Do-Check-Act, 3637
process kaizen, 40
projects, kaizen, 41
scientific method, 3637
standardized work, 4243
system kaizen, 40
value stream mapping, 3740
visual workplace, 43
Lean vs. traditional, 142
Learning organization, 23
Legacy systems, 5051
Lessons learned
Ingersoll Rand security technologies,
case study, 284288
project closure, 221222
software development, 189191
Level Five leadership, 233
Levels, management systems, 240244
Level schedule, creating
execution and test iterations, 184, 186
flow and pull, 107109
License management, 161162
Life cycle, see also Cycles, IT demand
management
approach, 177178
customer service and support, 186187
demand management, 181183
execution, 183184, 186
ITIL Version 3 service, 158, 160
measurements, 187188
organization, 177178
requirements, 178181
test iterations, 183184, 186
M
Make to order (MTO), 102
Make to stock (MTS), 102
Management by fact, 85
Management systems
accounting, 140142
acquisition, rapid, 135136
business intelligence, 133135
business process management, 237238
collaborative workspaces, 124125,
127, 129
command and control, 14
communication, 123124
demand management, 236237
education, 130131
executive review, 117
fundamentals, 121123, 234235
governance, 238240
importance of, 144
information systems role, 139140
integration, rapid, 135136
Intranet site, 128129
IT service/help desk, 129130
knowledge management, 124127
levels of, 240244
performance measurement, 131136
project, program, and portfolio
management, 238
strategy deployment, 235
strategy employment, 136140
training, 130131
value, 9
value creation as focus, 143144
Managers, Lean management levels, 242,
244
Manage Your Energy, Not Your Time,
54
Manufacturing waste comparison, 57
Mass customization
flow, balance, and agility, 103
process vs. practice, 81
Mastering the Management System, 234
Material requirements planning (MRP),
100101
Index 341
Matrix management, 75
Mean time between failure (MTBF), 163
Mean time to repair (MTTR), 163
Measure (DMAIC), 286, see also DMAIC
approach
Measurements
balanced scorecards, 87, 292293
benchmarking, 8588
blame and shortsightedness, 76
dashboards, 133135, 139
deadly sins, 85
fundamentals, 64
ITIL and cloud computing, 163164
performance, 131136
results, 86, 260262
scorecards, 134135, 139
services management, 163164
software development life cycle,
187188
Measuring ITIL, 150151
Micro-PDCA, 219221, see also Plan-DoCheck-Act (PDCA)
Mindfulness, 22, 222, 232
Misalignment, 68
Misdirection, 4
Mixed model production, 103
Momentum, building, 262264
Monitor and Control phase, 220221
Motion, 35, 323
MRP, see Material requirements planning
MTBF, see Mean time between failure
MTO, see Make to order
MTS, see Make to stock (MTS)
MTTR, see Mean time to repair (MTTR)
Muda (waste), 34, 35
Mura (uneveness), 34, 112, 236
Muri (overburden), 34, 112, 236
N
Necessary but non-value-added (NNVA)
work
compliance, 87
de-emphasis, 92
fundamentals, 34
Nike, 92, 9899
NNVA, see Necessary but non-valueadded (NNVA) work
O
Obeya room, 127, 208
Office waste comparison, 57
Operating systems, 77, see also Enterprise
software applications
Operation, service, 158
Operational dashboards, 133134, 139
Organization, 177178
Outsourcing, 6
Outward-facing Lean IT, xx
Overburden (muri), 34, 112, 237
Overengineering, 325326
Overprocessing
unnecessary complexity, 7
wastes, 35, 54, 123, 320321
Overproduction, 35, 322
Overspecialization, 152
P
Pace, 181
Paving cow paths, 70
PDCA, see Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA)
People, see also Human potential
accomplishing Lean IT, 65
continuous improvement, 11
Lean management levels, 244
overloading, 110
respect for, 2122, 239
roadmap, 249250
triple bottom line, 62
Percentages, 163164
Perfect storm, unnecessary complexity, 7
Performance, IT operational excellence
ITIL and cloud computing, 149168
project management, 193223
software development, 169191
Performance Dashboards: Measuring,
Monitoring and Managing Your
Business, 133
Performance measurements, see also
Measurements
acquisition, rapid, 135136
342 Index
business intelligence, 133135
fundamentals, 131133
integration, rapid, 135136
Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA)
demand planning, 114
feedback cycles, rapid, 231
fundamentals, 3637
iterations, 176
IT services management, 156
measures, 86
micro-PDCA, 219221
obeya room, 208210
planning emphasis, 183
project management, 213222
Project Management Office, 200
short cycles, 231, 235
standardized work, 42
Planning phase
project management, 215216, 218219
roadmap, 256260
PMBOK, see Project Management Body of
Knowledge (PMBOK)
PMO, see Project Management Office
(PMO)
Portfolio management
management systems, 238
organizing resources around, 153
project management, 197198
Toyota Australia case study, 298300
Postmortem meetings, 195, 241
Practical Lean Accounting, 141
Practice vs. process, 8083
PricewaterhouseCoopers, 151
Principle-Centered Leadership, 16
Prioritization
balancing, 116117
conflicting, IT view, 5
contradictory, 110
management-employees dialogue, 20
Proactive behavior, 2426
Problem description, 284285
Process assets, 82
Processes
accomplishing Lean IT, 65
bottom-up approach, 52
continuous improvement, 11
improvement, prioritization, 9093
innovating, 9293
Index 343
strategy-execution disconnect, 201
triple constraints model, 206
value, 193205
value stream mapping, 212213
Project Management Body of Knowledge
(PMBOK), 197
Project Management Office (PMO),
198200
Project prioritization, 298300
Projects
failure, 4
kaizen, 41
Six Sigma, 316
Proposal to management, 275279
Pursuit of perfection, 2223
Pyramid, Lean principles, 17, 18
Q
Quality, 150151, 240
Quality at the source
data quality, 55
IT services management, 156
Lean principles, 27
services management, 159160, 162
software development, 172
Quality function deployment, 180
Quality is Free, 150
Quality Movement, 14
Queing theory, 181182
R
Ratios, 163
Reactive firefighting, see Firefighting
Ready state, 182183
Real Numbers, 141
Recognition, information waste, 55, 5859
Reengineering the Corporation, 15
Regulatory requirements, 6, see also
Compliance
Requirements
churn, 174
software development life cycle,
178181
Resource thrashing, 5
Respect for people, 2122, 239
Responsibility, 202, 219
S
Sales and Operations Planning (S&OP),
112, 236
Sandbagging, 111, 174
Scalability, 139
Scientific management, 1314
Scientific method, 3637
Scorecards, 134135, 139, see also
Balanced scorecard
Scrum, 170
Security management, 139, 161162
Seeing the whole, 27, 170
Selection of project, 316317
344 Index
Self-reflection, 22, 222, 232
Sequence of work, 107, 116117
Server to system administrator ratio, 163
Service design, 158
Service desk A3 example, 330331
Service/help desk, 129130
Service operation, 158
Service-oriented architecture (SOA), 164
Services adoption, 165168
Services catalog, 157
Services management
A3 problem solving, 160
fundamentals, 156157
integrated processes, 157160
ITIL and cloud computing, 156164
license management, 161162
measurement, 163164
quality at the source, 159160, 162
security management, 161162
standard work, 162163
voice of the customer, 160
Service strategy, 158
Service transition, 158
Set in order, 273274, see also 5 S method
Setup time reduction, 176177
Shared beliefs, 32
Shared capability, 30
Shared information system services, 123
Shared resources/services scheduling
concentration of, 152
hazards, 155
IT view, 6
Sharing, knowledge behavior, 132
Shine, 274, see also 5 S method
Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence,
16, 71, 228
Signaling, knowledge behavior, 132
Silent assistance calls, see Kanban
Simplification, 8
Six Sigma, see also Continuous
improvement
background, 313314
complementary coexistence, 317
duration of project, 316
focus, 315
historical developments, 14
roles, 315316
selection of project, 316317
Index 345
Strategic scorecards, 135, see also
Balanced scorecards
Strategy, roadmap, 254256
Strategy deployment, 136140, 235
Strategy-execution disconnect, 201
Strategy management and processes, 292,
296298
Structured information, 125
Successful changes, percentage, 163
Summary
constancy of purpose, 1819
culture, 33
flow, pull, and just in time, 30
proactive behavior, 25
pursuit of perfection, 23
quality at the source, 24, 27
respect for people, 22
systems thinking, 28
voice of the customer, 26
Supporting processes, 52
Sustain, 274, see also 5 S method
Swarming, knowledge behavior, 132
System kaizen, 40, see also Kaizen
System requirements, 5
Systems anarchy, 4
Systems perspective, 7576
Systems thinking, 2728
T
Tactical dashboards and scorecards,
134135, 139
Takt time, 181
Teams and teamwork
building roadmap, 258259
capacity planning, 116
fundamentals, 63
Lean management levels, 244
Technical debt, 50, 174
Technical issues, overemphasis, 152
Technology
accomplishing Lean IT, 65
continuous improvement, 11
innovating processes, 92
vs. business solutions, 98
Tesco, 99
Test iterations, 183184, 186
The Fifth Discipline, 23, 124
The Goal, 15
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, 24
The Machine That Changed the World, 15,
233
Theme
constancy of purpose, 17
culture, 30
flow, pull, and just in time, 29
proactive behavior, 24
pursuit of perfection, 22
quality at the source, 27
respect for people, 21
systems thinking, 2728
voice of the customer, 26
Theory of Constraints, 15, see also
Continuous improvement
The Pittsburgh Way to Efficient Healthcare,
106
The Tech Jobs That the Cloud Will
Eliminate, 165
The Toyota Way, 29, 70
The Truth about IT Costs, 216
Three Cs, 74
Three Ms, 3436
Time Management Matrix, 24
Toolkit creation, 259
Tools
Lean IT, 6364
process information management, 89
Top-down processes, 52
Total Quality Management (TQM),
172, see also Continuous
improvement
Toyota, 98, see also Continuous
improvement
Toyota Australia case study
balanced scorecard history, 292293
fundamentals, 291
hoshin kanri evolution, 293294
IT as customer of Hoshin system, 298
IT solution evolution, 294295
Online Hoshin System, 300
portfolio management, 298300
project prioritization, 298300
strategy management and processes,
292, 296298
Toyota Production System, see
Continuous improvement
346 Index
TQM (Total Quality Management), see
Continuous improvement
Traditional methods
software development, 171174
vs. Lean IT, 49
Training, management systems, 130131
Transfer, 323
Transformation
advancement of Lean IT practices, 8
stages, 32
Transformational Lean leadership
business process management, 237238
demand management, 236237
fundamentals, 227
governance, 238240
integration, 244247
launching, 227228
leadership state of mind, 232234
levels of, 240244
management systems, 234244
project, program, and portfolio
management, 238
strategic intent, 229231
strategy deployment, 235
Transition, service, 158
Transportation, 35, 323
Tribal knowledge
best practices, 82
standardized work, 42
wasteful processes, 75
Triple bottom line, 6263
Triple constraints model, 206
T-shirt size estimates, 181
U
Understanding assessment, 260262
Underutilized human potential, 326
Uneveness (mura), 34, 112, 236
United Parcel Service (UPS), 62
Unnecessary complexity, 7, 325326, see
also Complexity
Unstructured information, 125
Utility providers, 244
V
VA, see Value-added (VA) work
Value
creation, 810
creation as focus, 143144
fundamentals, 33
intangible nature, information, 7482
project management, 193205
vs. features, 213
Value-added (VA) work, 34
Value-adding service center, 152155
Value Stream Management: Strategy and
Excellence in the Supply Chain,
137
Value streams
assessment roadmap, 259260
balancing, 116
capacity planning, 115116
costing, 141142
enterprise-wide, 73
fundamentals, 33
Value streams mapping (VSM)
discoveries, 75
fundamentals, 3740, 63
project management, 212213
work and supporting informatin flow,
59, 61
Velocity, 181
Vertical alignment, 8, 9, 137
Virginia Mason Medical Center case
study
background, 91, 301
collaboration solution, 303305
laboratory order process, 301303
Virtual information, waste, 53
Virtual Information Executives, 157158
Virtual line of sight, 133
Vision, roadmap, 254256
Visual controls, 122, 178
Visual workplace, 43, 64
Visual Workplace, Visual Thinking, 132
Voice of the customer (VOC)
exercise, 58
ITIL and cloud computing, 160
IT services management, 157
Lean principles, 26
list, 47
requirements, 178181
services management, 160
VSM, see Value streams mapping (VSM)
Index 347
W
Waiting, 35, 123, 322323
War room, see Obeya room
Waste, see also Information wastes
batch-and-queue, 173
intangible nature, 7482
Waterfall approach, 173
Websites, 319
What matters most, 18
Whole, seeing the, 27, 170
Z
Zero-defects mentality, 175