| Over the next decade I have no doubt that this lean business model
will replace the prevailing business model originally developed by
Alfred Sloan at General Motors, analysed and described in many books
by Peter Drucker and later refined by Jack Welch at GE. The power of
lean is the growing recognition by leading organisations in all
kinds of sectors that Toyota, the lean pioneer, is the reference
model for our age. Quite rightly their common aspiration is to
become the Toyota of their industry. |
| This is given added urgency as corporations well down their own
path to lean demonstrate their ability to fundamentally redefine the
nature of competition in their industry, as their competitors
struggle to keep up. Just look at the big strategic rethink going on
at WalMart even before Tesco opens its first Fresh and Easy store in
the US market, and the growing success of the acquisition and
turnaround strategy of early lean pioneer Danaher. |
| The fundamental insight behind lean is seeing that customer value
is created by the actions of lots of different people across many
departments and organisations. Linking these together into a
seamless end-to-end process or value stream for each product family
reveals literally hundreds of opportunities for streamlining the
flow, eliminating non value creating steps and aligning the rate of
flow with customer demand. This is lean in operations that most
people are familiar with. |
| But it applies throughout the organisation, not just on the shop
floor. All the support activities in the office can be redesigned
using the same principles and tools. Indeed we need to learn to see
our organisations as a collection of horizontal processes or value
streams as well as the more familiar vertical organisation of
functions and departments. Vertical functions are the right way to
organise knowledge but value is created by horizontal value streams. |