“All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”
This quote from George Orwell’s political allegory, Animal Farm, occurred to me recently as I listened to a design engineer explain to me how he was taught in college that engineers have a special responsibility to help their less able co-workers. Not intending to single out engineers or generalize from one data point, this example demonstrates what I observe to be a longstanding preoccupation with degrees, certificates, and belts. We may refer to employees on the front line as “value-adding”, but too often it's the ones with letters after their names that we actually value.
In 1957, Peter Drucker dubbed the latter group knowledge workers, "high-level employees who apply theoretical and analytical knowledge, acquired through formal education,” thereby inadvertently differentiating the thinkers from the do-ers, the high level from the low level, the brain trust from the variable expense.
Whether in a factory or an office or an operating room, the knowledge is contained in the work. In that sense, all work should be knowledge work if we are thinking about it and trying to improve it. Steve Spear refers to Lean transformation as “theory proven by practice.” Both are essential and should be inextricably linked. Our Lean transformation should have room for both the theorists and the practitioners. Unfortunately, when it comes to transformation, some employees are “more equal than others.” We favor the theorists and mostly ignore the practitioners. Perhaps our love affair with a college education and degrees and certificates and belts has baked in a two-class society where only a select few employees are heard and seen; the rest fall into that eighth waste category of “lost human creativity.” I’ve assembled a short list of nouns and adjectives commonly used to describe these classes. Can you think of others? Please share.
O.L.D.
P.S. GBMP is a licensed affiliate of The Shingo Institute and we are teaching their 5 courses on 17 occasions over the next few months (with new dates and locations being added all the time). I am a certified instructor along with other GBMPers Dan Fleming, Pat Wardwell, Mike Orzen & Larry Anderson. We hope to see you at a workshop soon. Here's the schedule; visit www.gbmp.org and click on Events to learn more. The Shingo Institute courses are a great way to learn how to embed Shingo Model principles into your Lean program and create a road map to sustainable Enterprise Excellence. Read what past attendees have said about the workshops and GBMP's instructors.