Lean Enterprise Institute Announces Workshops for Sustaining Continuous Improvement Cultures
The training classes on how to coach, lead, innovate, and problem solve in a lean business environment will run in February, March, and April 2013.
- Boston, MA-NH (1888PressRelease) February 04, 2013 - The nonprofit Lean Enterprise Institute (LEI) today announced a winter and spring schedule of workshops that train managers working in lean business environments on how to create and maintain cultures of continuous improvement.
Designed for continuous improvement professionals, line managers, function heads, and change agents in manufacturing and service businesses, the workshops will run at LEI, 215 First St., Cambridge, MA, in February, March, and April 2013.
The sessions will help managers and executives develop skills in coaching, leadership, problem solving, and innovating needed to transition to a continuous improvement culture based on daily problem solving, which is a critical part of creating a corporate culture based on lean management. The schedule is:
Managing to Learn: The Use of the A3 Management Process; February 12-13, 2013
This two-day course, built on lessons in the award-winning book Managing to Learn, reveals how to use A3 reports to create a deep problem-solving culture based on the scientific method of plan-do-check-act (PDCA). An A3 report captures the PDCA process on one sheet of paper. Topics include:
• What are the basic types and formats of different A3 stories
• How to use A3s to create alignment among the stakeholders in a problem
• How the versatile A3 report supports change management, human development, and knowledge sharing
• How to develop A3 writing skills
• How to respond as a mentor to the A3 reports of others
Leading in a Continuous Improvement Culture: Engaging and Coaching Problem-Solving Thinkers; February 14-15, 2013
This workshop is designed to help leaders who must acquire the new coaching and mentoring skills that they need to develop managers and employees for a lean management environment based on problem solving.
The session covers:
• Skills for engaging and developing employees as problem solvers
• Techniques for helping employees with problem solving without taking away their responsibilities
• Ways to lead discussions of problems that promote development of employees' job-handling capabilities
• How to ask questions that stimulate a person's grasp of a problem and possible causes
• Techniques to help others sort through the "noise" in a problem and focus on the real challenge they need to address
Transformational Leadership: A Program for Senior Leaders; March 6-8, 2013
This course gives leaders the twin benefits of learning and actually practicing the new leadership behaviors needed to support a lean transformation. A team of experienced LEI faculty members combine an experiential methodology with a realistic business simulation.
The session covers:
• Assess the gaps in current leadership and organizational systems that must be addressed to foster a culture of problem-solving
• Develop an action plan that addresses the gaps
• Identify core behaviors and practices that characterize lean leaders
• Clarify your role as a leadership change agent
• Develop experiments to create a new problem-solving culture at work
NEW! Improvement Kata / Coaching Kata; April 3-5, 2013
A kata is a pattern that is practiced and practiced in order to learn a new skill and mindset until it becomes second nature, like riding a bike. Thus, the improvement kata is a routine for daily systematic improvement. It's a practice pattern that helps managers and team members develop the ability to take business performance from the current level to a higher one. This ability is a key to creating a company culture where people, coached by their managers, make daily improvements based on the scientific method of PDCA.
The session covers:
• How kata patterns of thought and action help managers and teams improve systematically and scientifically every day
• How kata patterns provide a common way for everyone to navigate uncertainty and develop solutions
• How "coaching cycles" migrate managers toward a role of coaching and mentoring
• How to apply coaching routines that build people's improvement skills and a mindset of adaptation and innovation
Complete details about dates, content, pricing, and instructors are at the LEI Education page at lean.org.
Lean Enterprise Institute
Lean Enterprise Institute, Inc., was founded in 1997 by management expert James P. Womack, PhD, as a nonprofit research, education, publishing, and conference company with a mission to advance lean thinking around the world. We teach courses, hold management seminars, write and publish books and workbooks, and organize public and private conferences. We use the surplus revenues from these activities to conduct research projects and support other lean initiatives such as the Lean Education Academic Network, the Lean Global Network and the Healthcare Value Network. Visit LEI at http://www.lean.org for more information.
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