Polls Archive Other than assembly line work, does your company have cross-trained employees who can step in when someone is absent, or rotate jobs to promote improvement? Nearly every position has multiple people who can act as backups. Most positions have at least one person who can step in. Many positions have backups. Some positions have backups. Most positions struggle when people are absent. There are very few jobs with backups. View Results Loading ... See the full article where this poll was published. How good is your company at maintaining gains from projects? We do great. Nearly everything sticks. The majority of gains stick around. Fair. Some gains stick, Some don't. We have a hard time getting improvements to stick. Hardly any gains are around for long. View Results Loading ... See the full article where this poll was published. Do leaders in your organization give you enough time to complete projects? Always Nearly Always Sometimes Seldom Never View Results Loading ... Which of the following best describes your manager's presence in your work area? (Note: If you are a manager, please answer about yourself.) I seldom see my manager in my work area. I occasionally see my manager in my work area. I see my manager in my work area every day. I see my manager in my work area many times a day. My manager has a workspace in my area and I see him/her constantly. View Results Loading ... How are andon lights used in your company? (Choose one answer from each group, if applicable) Group 1: We do not use andon lights. Group 1: We use andon lights in some work areas. Group 1: We use andon lights in most work areas. Group 2: Our andon lights operate independent of each other. Group 2: Our andon lights are networked and show up on a central display. Group 3: We have no andon process in place. Group 3: We have an andon process in place, but it is not followed well. Group 3: We have an andon process in place and it is followed well. Group 4: We collect data from our andon lights. Group 4: We do not collect data from our andon lights. View Results Loading ... Which of the following statements is most true about your bottleneck? We haven’t given it any thought. Our managers know where it is. Our entire team knows where the bottleneck is. We have a migrating bottleneck. We have a standard process for managing our bottleneck. View Results Loading ... How many hands- on internal experts should a company have on their staff to help them along their Lean journey? Feel free to add comments at the bottom of this page to explain your choice. None One for the whole company, regardless of size One per thousand employees One per 500 employees One per hundred employees More than one per hundred employees View Results Loading ... What is your prediction about where Lean will be in 10 years? It will still be on the upswing with adoption spreading into new industries and sectors. It will be reinvigorated due to technological advances. It will be topping out. Most companies that will be adopting Lean will have already done it. Lean will be starting to fade due to a new management philosophy displacing it. Lean will have merged with other continuous improvement disciplines and will be unrecognizable to today's practitioners. Lean will be on its last legs as something new will have replaced it. Lean will be long gone. View Results Loading ... What is the source of improvement activity in your company? Executives and senior managers Skilled professionals (engineers, accountants, etc.) Frontline leaders Frontline employees Customers – informal feedback Customers – formal feedback system Daily management system Quality system Policy Deployment Other (Please specify in the comments) View Results Loading ... How common are KPI boards in your company? (Select the answer that most closely describes your company.) We don’t measure much, so we don’t post results. We measure regularly, but don't post results. We have KPI boards posted, but they are mostly just on the shop floor. We have KPI boards on the shop floor and in some office areas. We have KPI boards in most work areas. View Results Loading ... How long will it take a typical company to become "Lean"? 0-6 months 6-12 months Between 1 and 2 years Between 2 and 5 years Over 5 years View Results Loading ... Which of the following most accurately describes Toyota's current role in the Lean community? It deserves all the attention and accolades it gets. It is still the shining example of Lean. It is a great company, but the Lean community focuses too much on its success. Other car makers now outperform Toyota, so it is strange that Toyota still gets the attention. Toyota's role in the Lean community has diminished in recent years. Toyota is overrated and its reputation is the product of marketing by authors. Other (Please explain in the comments section.) View Results Loading ... Who has contributed the most to modern Lean? Select your top 3. Sakichi Toyoda Shigeo Shingo W. Edwards Deming Henry Ford Taiichi Ohno Jeff Liker John Shook James Womack Daniel Jones Frederick Taylor Eli Whitney John Krafcik Mike Rother Other View Results Loading ... Which of the following traits are most essential for a Lean leader? (Pick the top 3) Communication Commitment Connections (Ability to form relationships) Competence Challenging (Challenges oneself to improve) Consistency Confidence Courage Candor (Openness, ability to have hard conversations) Creativity Character Other (Please specify in the comments section) View Results Loading ... How is Lean typically received by frontline employees when it is first introduced? They have no idea what Lean is. They are wary because it sounds like a threat to job security. They are wary because it sounds like more work. They are receptive to the change. They know the company is in trouble, so will try anything to keep their job. They like the idea of continuous improvement and welcome the change. Frontline employees pushed for the company to implement Lean. Other (Please comment below) View Results Loading ... How does your company fit improvement activity into the work schedule? We don’t do much improvement activity. We fit it in when there is a gap in the schedule. We squeeze it into the schedule. We use overtime to handle improvement activity. We account for improvement activity in our staffing plan. We have a resource team in addition to staffing for improvement. Other. Please note in the comments section below. View Results Loading ... Do you use daily management in your company? No, this is the first I am hearing about it. Sort of. We do something similar to daily management, but it is a very informal process. Yes, we use formal daily management, but are fairly new at it. Yes, we have an established daily management process. No. We have tried it, but it didn't stick. View Results Loading ... How are kaizen events used in your company? We do not do kaizen events. We do occasional kaizen events, but they are not part of a strategy. We do some kaizen events, but they are tied into our strategy. We do a lot of 'drive-by' kaizen events (unlinked to strategy). We tie a full kaizen calendar to our strategic plan. Other (Please specify in the comments section below). View Results Loading ... Tell us about knowledge management in your company. We don't do anything that resembles knowledge management. We have some informal knowledge management. We are starting a formal knowledge management program. We do knowledge management, but it is not done well. We have seen moderate success with our knowledge management program. We have an effective knowledge management program. View Results Loading ... I think the 5 Whys is...(choose up to 3 answers) An effective problem-solving tool because of its ease of use. An effective problem-solving tool because it is easy to teach. An effective problem-solving tool because it is actually used by team members. An over-rated problem-solving tool because it is not repeatable. An over-rated problem-solving tool because it overly simplifies problems. An over-rated tool because it is easy to introduce bias. Most effective when combined with other problem-solving tools. Used less than it should be. Used more than it should be. View Results Loading ... How has Lean performed in your company? It has met or exceeded expectations (public company) It has not met expectations (public company) We do not use Lean (public company) It has met or exceeded expectations (private company) It has not met expectations (private company) We do not use Lean (private company) View Results Loading ... What are your thoughts on doing stand-alone 5S projects? I prefer doing 5S as part of an improvement project. I prefer stand-alone 5S projects. Both methods are equal. View Results Loading ... How much of Deming's original work have you read? I've read "Out of the Crisis" from cover to cover. I've read portions of "Out of the Crisis" from the actual book. I've read extracts of "Out of the Crisis". I've read summaries and interpretations of Deming's work. I've never read his work. Who is Deming? View Results Loading ... I think the TSA is... ...too invasive in its searches. ...perfect as is. I wouldn't change a thing. ...not thorough enough. There are too many security breaches. View Results Loading ... Does reaching a goal cause a high-performing teams to stop making improvements? Almost always Most times Sometimes Seldom Almost never View Results Loading ... Which obstacle slows Lean progress the most? Managers don't seem to share in the burden. Managers don't walk the talk. Teams have outspoken critics in their midst. The company doesn't invest in Lean. Lack of a perceived need. Other (please specify in comments below). View Results Loading ... Which problem solving method do you prefer? 8D DMAIC View Results Loading ... What is the biggest obstacle to Lean success in your company? Lack of management commitment Lack of employee engagement Lack of training No time allocated for improvement efforts Other (please post a comment if you select this) View Results Loading ...