At the beginning of this month, Brian Strobel published an intriguing new book entitled Pursuing Excellence: A Values-Based, Systems Approach to Help Companies Become More Resilient, which interestingly posits that a company doesn’t implement Operational Excellence as a methodology, model, or tool. Instead, a company realizes Operational Excellence. It does so by integrating effective leadership, teamwork, problem-solving, systems thinking, and continuous improvement. It achieves this by aligning strategies, empowering employees, optimizing business processes, and improving the customer experience.
When I spoke with Brian recently, I asked him: “Why do most companies fail when they strive to become more efficient and resilient?” Here is his full answer:
I think the fact that people are starting to ask questions
like this proves there’s a growing recognition our previous ways of doing
things aren’t working.
The way that we’ve managed our companies has remained largely
unchanged since the 18th century. Since then, different philosophies
have come and gone, but the central ideas for what it takes to manage our
companies have remained fairly consistent.
And our approach to achieve continuous improvement must also
change.
I believe that our legacy approaches to continuous
improvement, to include Lean and Six Sigma, are failing to consider the whole
system and account for the leadership principles necessary for success. These previous
methods placed too much emphasis on the specific improvement methodology,
without proper consideration for the entire system and surrounding culture,
systems and structures, values and beliefs, and the particulars of our
marketspace..
As I write
in my latest book Pursuing Excellence, “our companies are struggling with ways
to become more competitive, to reduce costs, and the chase unobtanium in their
never-ending pursuit to do more with less. But to survive, this focus on
efficiency must not come at the expense of innovation, agility, and moving
fast."
The world is now a new place, with new rules. Succeeding will
require new ways of looking at our problems. And the lens of operational
excellence can help us view these things from a different perspective.
A lens is something
that bends and refracts light to alter our vision. It allows us to see things
differently. The right kind of lens takes what’s already there, and through
convergence and divergence, provides a different perspective to view the
subject. It focuses our vision on those things we need to see with more
clarity.
These ideas that make up the lens of operational excellence,
as shown here, provide us the context for what must be considered as we move
towards driving change with a fundamental understanding that we must have
everyone aware of why we need to change. In this regard, the lens helps
guide the vision for our companies to become more resilient and move closer to
achieving excellence.
No comments:
Post a Comment