GembaTalk

GembaDocs

Dive into the world of the GembaDocs Community with expert guests who share their stories, challenges and top tips for optimizing operations, lean culture adoption, and reducing waste. You’ll travel around the globe to learn how all types of organizations are setting new standards in process excellence.

  1. Lean Q&A at Gemba Summit with Ryan Tierney, Tom Hughes and Brian Meyers

    12/03/2025

    Lean Q&A at Gemba Summit with Ryan Tierney, Tom Hughes and Brian Meyers

    Ryan Tierney of Lean Made Simple, Seating Matters, and Sperrin Metal, Tom Hughes of GembaDocs, and Brian Meyers of Fat American Manufacturing gathered for an extended Q&A session at Gemba Summit 2025. The panel shared their key takeaways from the two-day event - Tom emphasized the value of informal conversations between sessions, Ryan highlighted the bold visions people are taking home (making Germany the next Ireland, transforming the hospitality industry), and Brian reflected on Russell Watkins' insight about learning to see and appreciate progress before becoming critical. The audience asked about future Summits (overwhelming enthusiasm for next year, possibly needing a bigger venue!), scaling lean into new industries like hospitality and the public sector, and how to maintain connections after the event. The panel discussed how lean spreads to new sectors through passionate individuals who become exemplars - like Jane Wilkinson aiming to make her hotel the world-leading example of lean in hospitality, or Putra Kamaro implementing lean in Ontario's public sector despite political headwinds. Ryan closed with heartfelt thanks to the Seating Matters team for creating the structure that allowed him to focus on Sperrin Metal, emphasizing that sometimes you have to let things go to move forward. He declared that Sperrin Metal is going to be "the biggest, best lean transformation that the world has ever seen" and they're just at the beginning. Visit the Lean Cave at https://gembadocs.com/learn/ to read the full post or watch other sessions from Gemba Summit 2025.

    41 min
  2. 10 insights from Toyota Group and Japan / Russell Watkins, Sempai at Gemba Summit

    12/02/2025

    10 insights from Toyota Group and Japan / Russell Watkins, Sempai at Gemba Summit

    Russell Watkins of Sempai delivered an entertaining and wisdom-filled keynote at Gemba Summit 2025, sharing ten light bulb moments from decades working with Japanese manufacturers including Toyota and Denso. Starting his journey in 1999 at age 29 with sensei Toshiyuki Muraoka (who joined Toyota's Kamigo plant in 1964 and learned directly from Ohno's era of pull systems development), Russell candidly acknowledged that Japanese manufacturing isn't all sunshine - the teaching was harsh, including eight months of being shouted at. But the best Japanese businesses like Toyota are way ahead of everyone else. His ten insights ranged from tactical to philosophical: beat the sigmoid curve by disrupting edges before plateaus hit, establish control before attempting improvements (using a sandcastle metaphor about waves washing away uncontrolled change), learn to see the positive alongside problems (his sensei's powerful question: "do you see nothing good?"), train people to be time travelers who spot abnormalities before they become problems, and recognize operators beyond just tapping shoulders when problems occur. He emphasized that the floor tells you everything - from management office messiness to kanban cards lying around like "baby birds with broken wings." People want standardized work (shown through their handwritten notes and improvised systems), but management hasn't enabled it. Russell embraced Japanese fish metaphors for accumulating many small improvements rather than hunting big transformations, and concluded that self-reliance - the ability to find your own gap without rose-colored spectacles - is the highest expression of lean skill, not "being lean." His opening was characteristically humble: he hasn't had an original thought in years, but stealing ideas mercilessly without ego and learning relentlessly has served him exceptionally well. Key Takeaways:Beat the sigmoid curve like elite teams - disrupt the edges before the plateau hits to maintain excellenceControl comes first - team leader control (shift briefs, area patrol, problem escalation) before any other lean toolsDon't just filter for the gap - deliberately look for the positive and value alongside problemsTrain people to be time travelers who spot abnormalities before they become problems (three choices with the coil defect example)Implement Pro Process - recognize operators before problems occur, not just tap shoulders when things go wrongThe floor tells you everything - messy management offices, Kanban cards on floor, broken tabs reveal system healthPeople want standardized work (shown by their improvised systems) - management just hasn't enabled it properlyEmbrace fish metaphors - accumulate many small improvements rather than hunting for one big transformationSelf-reliance (finding your own gap without rose-colored spectacles) is the highest expression of lean skillLearn and steal mercilessly without ego - there's little original in the world, success comes from humble adoption and relentless learning Speaker DetailsName: Russell WatkinsCompany: SeempaiWebsite: www.sempai.co.ukLinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/russellwatkinssempai/ Subscribe 🎙️ Subscribe to GembaTalk podcast for more insights on Lean culture, SOPs, and manufacturing excellence.

    28 min
  3. Lean & AI / Paul Vallely, Kukoon at Gemba Summit

    12/01/2025

    Lean & AI / Paul Vallely, Kukoon at Gemba Summit

    Paul Vallely of Kukoon delivered one of the most practical and honest presentations at Gemba Summit 2025 about integrating AI with lean thinking. Seven years into their lean journey after visiting Seating Matters in 2018, Paul openly shared what Kukoon still needs to improve - including bringing back a second morning meeting in January because reducing to one weekly meeting had failed to transfer lean knowledge to new team members, creating an embarrassingly large gap between experienced and new people. His AI guidance was refreshingly direct and came in three phases: First, use ChatGPT for everything at every opportunity - it costs $30/month and teaches you how to become a better prompter through feedback loops. Second, invest heavily in automation capabilities through scripts and coding. Kukoon built a three-person business improvement team that created exponential time savings, reaching 150 hours saved monthly for less than 40 hours of input by month 12. The key is "slow is smooth and smooth is fast" - create subject matter experts, give them time to learn, and focus on maximum returns rather than easy wins. Third, proceed with extreme caution on big-ticket AI platforms. After extensive research and investing £60,000 annually in two AI platforms, Paul's assessment was blunt: "There's a lot of snake oil being sold." Many companies are just ChatGPT with good connectors charging tens of thousands for $30 worth of capability. He gave it 50/50 odds they'd still use either platform next year. His overall message: embrace AI learning, build automation skills, but be very skeptical of expensive platforms that promise more than ChatGPT can already deliver. Key Takeaways:Be transparent about what needs improvement - Kukoon is adding back an additional morning meeting and formal Kaizen targets after realizing knowledge transfer wasn't happeningUse ChatGPT for everything - every question, analysis, comparison, especially things you think it can't help withChatGPT has become exceptional at teaching better prompting through feedback loops - tell it why answers aren't rightInvest in building automation capabilities with Google Apps Scripts, Python, and Power Automate - create integrated systems"Slow is smooth and smooth is fast" - automation has steep learning curves but exponential returns once masteredCreate subject matter experts within your team and give them dedicated time to learn and testFocus on maximum returns, not easy wins - determine where automation creates most value across entire businessFor big AI platform investments, require ROI in under two years because technology moves so fast top solutions become obsolete quicklyProceed with extreme caution - many AI companies are selling "snake oil," charging tens of thousands for ChatGPT with connectorsEven manufacturing-heavy businesses have opportunities - everyone else is moving data around, and automating that benefits accuracy, efficiency, and service Speaker DetailsName: Paul VallelyCompany: KukoonWebsite: www.kukoonrugs.comLinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/paulvallely-kukoon/ Subscribe 🎙️ Subscribe to GembaTalk podcast for more insights on Lean culture, SOPs, and manufacturing excellence.

    24 min
  4. Building lean depth into your people / Oliver Conger, British Rototherm at Gemba Summit

    11/28/2025

    Building lean depth into your people / Oliver Conger, British Rototherm at Gemba Summit

    Oliver Conger of British Rototherm delivered a powerful transformation story at Gemba Summit 2025, sharing his journey from near-failure to lean excellence. After buying a 150-year-old manufacturing business and making things worse for five years through bad acquisitions and disastrous systems, Oliver discovered two second lean and created a culture of improvement. But they hit a plateau - culture without depth wasn't enough. Four years ago, he reluctantly sent three people to a Toyota mentoring program, and everything changed. Those people transformed, inspiring others and creating demand for the same learning. British Rototherm went all in, sending 70% of their people through the program, and was recently named Lean Exemplar for the entire UK submarine program. Oliver shared four critical elements that built depth into their journey: clarity of leadership and team member roles, facts and data-driven decisions (including a comprehensive Andon system), coaching and challenging people to achieve the incredible, and creating structure that happens to the day rather than reacting defensively. The unexpected fifth benefit? Their lean depth accelerated their AI and automation journey, as both require the same fundamentals: continuous improvement mindset, quality data, challenging thinking, and structure. With AI employees now on their org chart and products designed for zero human touch manufacturing, Oliver asked: how many times more super can you be if you build depth into your lean journey? Key Takeaways:Top management commitment is the first, second, and third most important requirement for lean successAbsolute clarity on roles and expectations for both leaders and team members eliminates ambiguity and drives ownershipTransform from opinion-based to fact-based decisions - without data, you're just another person with an opinionImplement systems like Andon that capture problems as treasures and create data for effective problem-solvingCoach and challenge people with a full day's work - the biggest gains are locked up in your peopleMake the structure happen to the day - be offensive, not defensive in how you manage time and prioritiesLean depth accelerates AI readiness - both require continuous improvement mindsets, quality data, and structured thinkingBuilding depth through Toyota mentoring transformed British Rototherm from plateau to hosting lean events for billion-dollar programs Speaker DetailsName: Oliver CongerCompany: British Rototherm GroupWebsite: www.rotothermgroup.comLinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/oliver-conger-2149651/ Subscribe 🎙️ Subscribe to GembaTalk podcast for more insights on Lean culture, SOPs, and manufacturing excellence.

    21 min
  5. The importance of the leader at the Gemba / Alan Weir, Retired, Toyota UK at Gemba Summit

    11/27/2025

    The importance of the leader at the Gemba / Alan Weir, Retired, Toyota UK at Gemba Summit

    Alan Weir, recently retired from Toyota UK after nearly 34 years, delivered a moving keynote at Gemba Summit 2025 about what truly drives excellence in lean manufacturing. Speaking in Belfast where he grew up, Alan shared insights from his time as Deputy Managing Director at one of Toyota's most efficient plants globally. His message was clear: it's not about automation or technology - it's about people. Through powerful video testimonials and real examples, Alan demonstrated how Toyota develops every team member into a problem solver through QC circles, how leaders spend their first two hours daily at the Gemba understanding real facts rather than reading reports, and how the Andon system empowers anyone to stop the line while being thanked for raising problems. He shared a detailed case study of reducing maintenance turnover through thoughtful leadership - spending one hour per week for two years listening directly to team members and relentlessly following up on their concerns. His concluding message captured Toyota's philosophy perfectly: "First we build people, then we build cars." Key Takeaways:QC circles develop every team member into a problem solver, creating 2,500 problem solvers rather than relying on management aloneBlock out the first two hours daily for Gemba walks to understand real facts at the source, not through reports or presentationsEvery person has power to pull the Andon cord, and leaders thank them for raising problems - if the Andon isn't going off, that's the real problemThoughtful leadership means not accepting surface complaints at face value, but creating focus groups and spending consistent time hearing directly from team membersTake control of your diary and structure it around Gemba time, or other departments will fill every slotToyota's competitive advantage isn't automation - it's the systematic development of people and future leaders Speaker DetailsName: Alan WeirCompany: Retired, Toyota UKWebsite: www.toyotauk.comLinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/alan-weir-591a24a8/ Subscribe 🎙️ Subscribe to GembaTalk podcast for more insights on Lean culture, SOPs, and manufacturing excellence.

    27 min
  6. Bonus Episode: How to Build a Culture Around Standards with SOPs with Brian Meyers

    11/10/2025 · BONUS

    Bonus Episode: How to Build a Culture Around Standards with SOPs with Brian Meyers

    In this bonus episode, Tom Hughes visits FAT American Manufacturing in Kalamazoo, Michigan, to talk with Brian Meyers, one of the most prolific GembaDocs users in the world. In just over a year, Brian’s team have created more than 2,000 SOPs - and actually uses them every day. This episode dives into how FAT American turned standard work from a chore into a cornerstone of culture. Expect real talk about ownership, respect, and how documenting the little things unlocks big results. "You're buying back your time by having a standard because you can just say go, here's the SOP, go check it out and follow through with it." - Brian MeyersKey Topics:1. Making SOPs a Priority Why SOPs need to be part of daily conversations and celebrationsHow FAT American turned documentation into a shared responsibility 2. Building Culture Through Standards How morning meetings feature new SOPsUsing standards to respect people and set them up for success 3. Buying Back Time The real cost of repeating instructionsHow visual SOPs cut onboarding time and boost clarity 4. Common Challenges Managing thousands of SOPs and avoiding duplicationThe importance of clear deployment and naming systems 5. Lessons for Every Manufacturer Make standards visual, not verbalThink like a new hireDon’t just create SOPs - live them Links and Resources:Explore GembaDocs (https://gembadocs.com) for your SOP, skills training and lean needs. Connect with Us:GembaDocs LinkedInTom’s LinkedInLean by Doing Podcast by Brian MeyersFat American Manufacturing's website 🎙️ Subscribe to GembaTalk podcast for more insights on Lean culture, SOPs, and manufacturing excellence.

    20 min

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Dive into the world of the GembaDocs Community with expert guests who share their stories, challenges and top tips for optimizing operations, lean culture adoption, and reducing waste. You’ll travel around the globe to learn how all types of organizations are setting new standards in process excellence.

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