Lessons from an aspiring lean leader

This week I will be sharing lessons I’ve learned as a lean leader and champion – in particular around visual management. The Lean Enterprise Institute (LEI) holds an annual Lean Transformation Summit canstockphoto16267629where experts and practitioners come together from all industries to learn from one another.

My talk will cover a multi-year journey that has involved learning from others both in and out of healthcare, site visits, training classes, lots of reading, and experiments with my leadership team. Most of my talk is based on my experience and lessons learned at the University of Michigan Health System.

I was delighted to see that University Hospitals where I’m currently the interim CIO has been on their own lean journey since 2011. At our hospitals you will see huddles and visual boards throughout. Thousands of staff have been trained in lean concepts and methods. In contrast, there have been limited experiments with lean at the corporate office. I have a few allies in my IT leadership team who have experience with lean in other organizations. A good start!

I would have been making a mistake to arrive at UH as the interim CIO and start introducing lean methods week one. I needed to see and hear the problems that need to be addressed. There are gaps, even though the internal processes are good and everyone is working on a long list of projects. Teams could coordinate better. At our weekly Project Management Office (PMO) meeting we review a long list of projects focusing on those with a project health status of red or yellow. But with so many projects, it’s hard to see the forest for the trees. What are the top 20 projects that are most important?  We should be focused like a laser on the most critical projects and initiatives.

I am beginning to socialize with my leadership team the idea of regular huddles and a visual board that covers the most critical projects.  I’ve identified and shared with them my top focus areas for this interim engagement. I developed the list week 5 and validated it with my boss after a lot of listening to my team and UH executives.

The whiteboard in my office is my visual management canvas. My focus areas are listed. The proposed critical projects and initiatives are listed and refined as I bring my VPs in to see it and give their perspective. Each of them do a weekly “quad chart” and those are posted there. They are one page visuals that the former CIO introduced. The 4 sections are: “now/this week”, “later/immediate horizon”, “barriers/issues/roadblocks”, and “immediate action required”. There is also a fifth section in the middle called “wins”.  At a glance I can see where they are focused and the issues they are dealing with which may need escalation. It’s a great tool that I plan to copy in future organizations.

Here are the key takeaways and lessons that I will use to close my talk:

Leader as champion – the success of lean efforts in any organization depends on the top leader committing to it, driving it, supporting it, and spreading the word. If I’m the top leader of IT within my organization, then I need to be the champion!

Need to be vocal and visible – the leader needs to talk and write about it so everyone can see you are committed to the journey and that it’s not the “program du jour”.

Limits of the “just do it” approach – I’m an impatient person. I want things to happen quickly. I like to get through planning and design phases quickly and just do it. I’ve learned that to be successful with lean takes time. You need everyone on the journey so be patient and figure out how to bring them along.

Need for overall program owner and driver to partner with – you can’t do it yourself. Find the person on your team who shares your passion and commitment and partner with them to make it happen.

Letting go so others can develop and shape it – you have a partner so you don’t have to do it all yourself. And that means it may not look the way you think it should.

Be willing to experiment and don’t get stuck on perfection – in IT we need to have everything well designed, built and tested before we implement. People depend on our systems. But with lean, you can experiment and tweak as you get some initial experience and learn what works. As you adjust it, ask yourself if that is what better looks like.

Ownership by the entire team – like anything a team does, the leader can’t own it by themselves. It’s a team effort that takes buy-in and ownership from every member.

PDCA – plan-do-check-act. At the right intervals look at what’s working well and what’s not. Make adjustments and implement. Then repeat.

Be patient but persistent – enough said!

Note to self – these are all lessons to apply to the UH phase of my lean journey. Stay tuned!

Resources:

Previous lean posts

Lean Enterprise Institute

 

4 thoughts on “Lessons from an aspiring lean leader

  1. Karen O'Sickey on said:

    I love hearing this. Back when I was a co-owner of a small family machining business I used lean six sigma principles to clean up the various department processes in our shop. Visuals and 5-whys worked wonderfully! I have been at UH for 4 years now and would love to see projects prioritized better and more coordination among the teams… break down the silos. I know I could work much more efficiently if I had the opportunity.

    • Sue Schade on said:

      Karen, thanks for feedback. Hope to do just that – better prioritization, focus on highest priorities, and improved coordination across teams.

  2. Sowmya Moorthy on said:

    Great article Sue! This article was a good precursor to yesterday’s HIMSS webinar (Lean Visual Systems in Healthcare IT) by Drex DeFord. I love the fact that his key points on Lean Management resonated not only with your article but with UH’s organization culture!
    1. Socializing the Lean Behavior – Helping hospital staff to understand Lean is not just a mix of Japenese words and jargons. it is more of a simple scientific process
    2. Finding waste – Easy concept; Hard to find
    3. Transparency – Develop and Empower lean thinking
    4. Team spirit – Staff helping each other is strength, Asking for help is not a sign of weakness
    5. Visual Board – A picture is worth thousand words. “Cans & Strings” – paper works great!

    Thanks for sharing the webinar link.

    Sowmya

    • Sue Schade on said:

      Sowmya, great to see your enthusiasm for lean thinking. You will be an important part of our leadership visual management as we roll it out.

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