Are your company executives lean leaders?
Last month, I wrote about the concept of lean management and what that means not only for your company but also for your customers.
If company leadership wants to transform the culture of the organization and become a lean company, they've first got to understand what comprises lean leadership. And then ask themselves if they "qualify." In other words, they need to be lean leaders themselves.
What does that mean?
Lean for Dummies outlines the following behaviors of lean leaders.
They know how the business serves the customers by:
They build ability in the people through:
They show a continuous improvement mindset by:
They focus on process and results by:
They demonstrate an understanding of the value stream at a macro and micro level through:
They create a culture to sustain improvement by:
I could've stopped right there and claimed that I knew enough about lean leaders. But I thought I'd take a look at a couple of other sites offering up traits and behaviors of lean leaders in order to hear some different perspectives.
TBM Consulting Group explained nine behaviors and actions of lean leadership in their whitepaper, 9 Ways Leaders' Actions Can Sustain Lean Progress .
And, finally, Process Excellence Network shared six traits of lean leaders . They...
As I read the traits from these three sources, I realized that they've included all the things we typically preach when it comes to a customer experience/culture transformation. One of my favorite aspects is the notion of gemba (which all three sources have in common), going to see where the action happens. If you don't see for yourself, if you don't understand it, if you don't gather facts at the point where "it" happens, then you can't transform it.
Now, how do we develop leaders with these traits? Or instill these traits into our leaders? If they came with these traits, wouldn't your job as a customer experience professional be much easier?
There are three kinds of leaders: those who tell you what to do, those who allow you to do what you want, and Lean leaders who come down to the work and help you figure it out. -John Shook