376 episodios

Mark Graban reads and expands upon selected posts from LeanBlog.org. Topics include Lean principles and leadership in healthcare, manufacturing, business, and the world around us.

Learn more at http://www.leanblog.org/audio Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lean-blog-audio/support

Lean Blog Audio Mark Graban Podcasts

    • Economía y empresa

Mark Graban reads and expands upon selected posts from LeanBlog.org. Topics include Lean principles and leadership in healthcare, manufacturing, business, and the world around us.

Learn more at http://www.leanblog.org/audio Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lean-blog-audio/support

    Preventing Surgical Errors: Effective Strategies Over Warning Signs in Operating Rooms

    Preventing Surgical Errors: Effective Strategies Over Warning Signs in Operating Rooms

    The blog post

    IMAGE: A sign that reads "CAUTION: DON'T OPERATE ON THE WRONG SIDE"

    It's silly, right? I've never seen a sign like this in an operating room. And I'm not advocating for them. It's not the right approach for quality and patient safety.

    If warning signs actually prevented mistakes, and given that a vast majority of mistakes are caused by human factors (like fatigue) and systemic factors (like being behind schedule because instruments were delivered late to the O.R.)…1) A sign like this would be posted in every operating room

    and2) Wrong-site, wrong-side, and wrong-patient surgeries would never occurBut, of course, it's not that simple.What works?Mistake-proofing works.






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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lean-blog-audio/support

    • 2 min
    Celebrating 100 Years of Shewhart’s Control Charts: A Century of Quality Management

    Celebrating 100 Years of Shewhart’s Control Charts: A Century of Quality Management

    The blog post

    TODAY marks the centennial of one of the most significant innovations in quality management: the control chart. 🎂 🎉 🎆

    In the early 1920s, Walter A. Shewhart, working at Bell Labs, recognized the need for a statistical method to monitor and control manufacturing processes.

    On May 16, 1924, Shewhart created the first “control chart,” a tool that distinguished between common cause variation (inherent in the process) and special cause variation (due to specific, identifiable factors). This simple yet powerful distinction laid the foundation for modern statistical process control (SPC). Control charts were dubbed “Process Behavior Charts” by Donald J. Wheeler Ph.D.)

    The latest and greatest of the control charts is the “XmR Chart” — as Wheeler wrote about in Understanding Variation and I wrote about in Measures of Success (a book that has a foreword written by Wheeler).




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    • 5 min
    LinkedIn Poll on Barriers to Speaking Up: Fear and Futility

    LinkedIn Poll on Barriers to Speaking Up: Fear and Futility

    The blog post

    Research by Ethan Burris shows that the top two reasons employees choose to keep quiet in the workplace are:1️⃣ Futility2️⃣ FearFear of getting in trouble is a big problem. But there are also many workplaces where people say, quite literally, “I'm not afraid to speak up, it just isn't worth the effort.”That's the Futility Factor.Please answer this poll question via LinkedIn. And I'd love to hear your thoughts in a comment here on the blog post or LinkedIn. Please check out people's comments and stories that they shared on Linkedin.


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    • 3 min
    My New Mistake-Proofing Course for TKMG Academy: Available Now!

    My New Mistake-Proofing Course for TKMG Academy: Available Now!

    Episode page with links and more info

    I'm very happy to announce the release of my new Mistake-Proofing course, available NOW through Karen Martin and TKMG Academy.

    You can buy the course individually at TKMGAcademy.com for $129. Volume discounts are available for large teams or your entire workforce (for more information, email info@tkmgacademy.com).

    The course is also part of the wonderful collection of courses in the all-access annual subscription. The annual price of $529 goes up significantly at 11:59 pm CDT on May 31st, so act now for the best value pricing.

    Other TKMG Academy instructors in the series include Karen Martin, Elisabeth Swan, Mike Osterling, Tracy O'Rourke, Brent Loescher... and more.

    And if you subscribe to TKMG Academy, you can participate in Karen's "Community of Practice" meeting with me on Wednesday, June 26th.


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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lean-blog-audio/support

    • 6 min
    Do We Need Another Share in the See, Solve, Share Model of Continuous Improvement?

    Do We Need Another Share in the See, Solve, Share Model of Continuous Improvement?

    Blog post

    I love Steve Spear‘s emphasis on a Toyota-based Lean model of:

    “See, Solve, Share”

    See problems, solve problems, and share what worked as countermeasures. That's the ideal, and it's powerful where it exists.

    At Toyota, and companies like it, there's an understanding that speaking up about problems leads to a constructive response from leaders. 

    That's not always true at other companies that are starting or attempting their “Lean Journey.”

    The Psychological Safety that might be taken for granted at Toyota must be actively cultivated in a company before continuous improvement can really take root, let alone take off.

    I think the model could also be stated as:

    “See, Share, Solve, Share”




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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lean-blog-audio/support

    • 3 min
    LinkedIn Poll on Barriers to Speaking Up: Fear and Futility

    LinkedIn Poll on Barriers to Speaking Up: Fear and Futility

    Blog post

    Research by Ethan Burris shows that the top two reasons employees choose to keep quiet in the workplace are:1️⃣ Futility2️⃣ FearFear of getting in trouble is a big problem. But there are also many workplaces where people say, quite literally, “I'm not afraid to speak up, it just isn't worth the effort.”That's the Futility Factor.Please answer this poll question via LinkedIn. And I'd love to hear your thoughts in a comment here on the blog post or on LinkedIn.


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    Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lean-blog-audio/support

    • 2 min

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