Just two days to go before our 16th Annual Northeast L.E.A.N. Conference, an opportunity for all of us to put aside the tactical realities of Covid-19 and think more strategically about the future of society. Our theme this year, 21st Century Lean, deals with the humanistic application of technology, in particular information technology, in the coming decades. Concepts like the Internet of Things (IoT, coined in 1999) and Industry 4.0 (first referenced in 2011) are rapidly moving to center stage. The goals of each are laudable:
So where does Lean fit into these strategies? Must we adapt some of the thinking to new technology? A client of mine, for example, once asked “If Mr. Shingo were alive today, with all of the automation we have, would he have invented mistake-proofing?” Or are the principles and concepts of Lean more important than ever before to help us reign in our impulses; to aim for, as my teacher, Hajime Oba once said “what we should do, not what we can do.” In 2003, speaking at SME’s Eastec Exhibit in Springfield, Mass, Mr. Oba was asked, “Why do American manufacturers get so little benefit from TPS?” Mr. Oba responded without hesitation, “First, management does not understand TPS and second they are focused only on quarterly earnings.” Did Mr. Oba have Mr. Whipple in mind?
Here is my 10th and final Lean Peeve before the conference: short-term thinking. It’s not too late to invest in a little strategic thinking about this critical and now urgent idea of harmonizing the best of Lean Transformation and Digital Transformation. Take a couple days to stop worrying about what’s going to happen the next month. Give yourself a break, and join our discussion about where our world is headed for next century. Hope to see you at the conference.
O.L.D.