LITA Lean IT Leadership Publication
LITA Lean IT Leadership Publication
LITA Lean IT Leadership Publication
Publication
V 1.0
February 2016
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
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3 Committing to Self-Development
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5 Continuous Improvement
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5.1 Teams..............................................................................................................................................................................................................47
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7 Lean IT Transformation
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8 Appendix A: A3 Thinking
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9 Appendix B: References
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10 Appendix C: Glossary
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Foreword
Acknowledgements
This publication has been created to accompany the Lean IT Leadership certification. It is the result of
collaboration in which people have selflessly invested time and effort in creating this document.
The author wishes to extend the deepest gratitude to Troy DuMoulin, Pink Elephant, for his continued
support in developing the content for the curricula of the Lean IT Association.
This publication would not have been possible without the benefit of the critical reviews by members
of the LITA Content Board, the LITA Content Review Board and other members of the Lean IT
community.
Mike Orzen, Mike Orzen & Associates, Member of Lean IT Association Content Advisory Board
Reni Friis, BlueHat, Member of Lean IT Association Content Advisory Board
Daniel Breston, Ranger Consulting, Member of Lean IT Association Content Advisory Board
Marianne Hubregtse, Exin
Rita Pilon, Exin
Jan Hendriks, Quint Wellington Redwood
Eline Zweers, Quint Wellington Redwood
Karlijn Bruns, Quint Wellington Redwood
The author wishes to thank these reviewers for sharing their insights and wisdom.
Target audience
The target audience of this document is:
1 Introduction
Any publication on the application of Lean
principles within any organization in any
industry will mention the critical importance
of leadership in the success of the initiative, or
the lack of success if leadership is absent. Our
experience supports this observation entirely.
It should therefore not be surprising that, in the
range of certifications that constitute the Lean
IT Associations certification scheme, a Lean IT
Leadership certification is included.
There are thousands of publications on
Leadership, many on Leadership in IT,
less on Lean leadership and very few on
Lean leadership within the IT context. This
publication brings together published ideas on
leadership, Lean leadership and leadership in
IT, and combines this with practical experience
from Lean IT practitioners, to provide a wellrounded view of Lean leadership within IT.
Much of the literature on Lean leadership
describes the way leadership works in
established Lean environments. In this
document, we start with the premise that you
and your IT organization are new to Lean, or
have little experience. We aim to describe both
the state to which you should aspire (Chapters
3 to 6) and the journey from the situation of
your IT organization (Chapter 7).
Our intent is to provide insights that will help
you to ensure the success of your use of Lean
principles within your IT organization.
Among the pre-eminent work done on Lean
leadership, two books stand out: The Toyota
Way to Lean Leadership and Developing Lean
Leaders at all Levels, both written by Jeffrey
Liker. These books both present a model of
models containing principles for Lean. The Shingo principles are divided into a structure of Guiding
and Supporting principles and represent the key values, which differentiate Lean Leadership from
other models. While you can argue that all positive principles and values apply to leadership, this is
too broad a statement and does not help leaders to focus on the aspects that really matter.
There are four Guiding Principles that we can clearly and directly link to leadership:
1. Respect Every Individual
2. Lead with Humility
3. Create Constancy of Purpose
4. Think Systemically
C. Closed-loop thinking
Systemic thinking occurs between parts of a
system that occur over time, rather than snapshot events.
A. Holistic thinking is about understanding
the interconnectedness of the aspects
of larger systems. Holistic thinking
means looking at the big picture
and being aware of the relationships
between the components.
B. Dynamic thinking focuses on creating
a vision for the near or distant future.
It aims to increase understanding of
what has happened, what is happening
and identifying what may happen
in the future. It means gaining deep
understanding of the dynamics of
the situation and how these may be
shifting.
C. Closed-loop thinking requires
understanding how changes within the
system ripple across the value stream,
affecting the work and behavior
of other employees in the same
department, in other departments,
external customers, suppliers, and other
stakeholders.
As leaders move into systemic thinking, the full
value of operational excellence is realized as it
moves across the organization, the enterprise
it operates within, and ultimately the entire
value chain. As employees at all levels of the
organization adopt systemic thinking practices,
they gain the necessary understanding to
safely initiate improvement projects on their
own. Ultimately, this understanding is what
allows the improvement effort to move from
being solely top-down to include more effort
from the work floor.
These principles are the basis for Lean
leadership. In the rest of this publication, we
will show how these principles also govern
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1. The dispersal of power and the expectation that leadership will come from the base of the
hierarchy ensures that there is a constantly growing set of potential future senior leaders
who gain experience on a daily basis
2. It ensures that change is driven by people closest to the problem which results in better
problem solving, more sustainable solutions and the possibility of continuous improvement.
3. It, lastly, ensures that visions are cascaded down through the organization (Hoshin Kanri) and
that the True North principles are being pursued are the organizations goals, not the goals of
an individual leader.
Traditional Western Leader
Lean Leader
Quick Results
Patient
Proud
Humble
Lean leadership is about demonstrating an honest interest in people combined with performance
objectives. Structurally showing true interest in how employees execute their tasks, but not telling
them how to do their work distinguishes Lean leaders from traditional leaders.
Lean leaders stimulate and inspire employees through dialogue and by setting challenging
expectations at the individual level. They inspire people to change from just doing my work to my
work makes a difference; it is necessary to achieve our long term goals. They build systems and
processes that cascade responsibility. Lean leaders influence by being knowledgeable, by getting into
messy details, by coaching and teaching.
To close this paragraph, there is no better summary of Lean leadership than that provided by Fujio
Cho, chairman of Toyota. In six words, he encompasses the essence of Lean leadership: Go See, Ask
Why and Show Respect
And this is what truly sets Lean leadership apart from other forms of leadership, the emphasis on
building organizations in which people truly respect one another for the contribution they make to
the success of the organization and its customers.
Many IT managers have developed under the Western leadership culture as described in the table
above. This fact alone means that integrating Lean principles into the way of working will not only
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1.5.0.1 Figure 2: Diamond Model of Lean Leadership Development (Liker and Convis 2012)
A True North Value is a core value by which everyone within an organization lives. True North is what
you should do, not what you could or can do. Liker and Convis identify five True North values based
on their experiences at Toyota:
A. Challenge
B. Kaizen Mind
C. Go and See
D. Teamwork
E. Respect
These values are strongly related to those used by Toyota and will be further elaborated on in
chapter 3. As Lean practitioners, we have challenged these True North Values and considered the
possibility of alternatives that would apply specifically to IT organizations when applying Lean
principles. In our deliberations, we have found that attempts to define different True North values
or use different words to describe similar concepts have led us back to these five True North
Values; they have constancy across the full Service Lifecycle and apply to all different types of IT
organizations. In summary, they represent an excellent starting point, covering the key values that
leaders starting on their Lean journey must adopt.
The development model itself describes four key steps:
1. Commit to Self-Development
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supporting departments (like HR, Legal or Finance), IT contains the full range of business
functions and develops products and services i.e. the IT organization does research and
development. The IT organization ensures that IT services run in production and that it
provides support and maintenance for these products and services. IT usually manages
its own finances, because these tend to be complicated in such areas as cost allocation
or budgeting. The HR management for IT is increasingly seen as a separate, specialist
discipline, as can be seen from the development of the e-Competence Framework. Often,
IT departments need their own specialized purchasing and legal support to deal with the
requirements for contracting external parties.
Altogether, IT should be viewed as more than a supporting department.
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management. This can lead to perceptions that do not match reality. Going to the IT Gemba requires
an understanding of what is actually going on, and this means looking through the invisibility of IT
and understanding what really happens. An example of this invisibility can be found in the question:
what is the Andon cord of the IT organization? This is also a mark of the difference between Lean IT
and other forms of Lean.
A final word on the impact of the context of Lean IT: in his book, Liker himself refers to an IT example
of the application of Lean principles as an example of non-traditional Lean.
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exist and serve. This will typically include mapping of their primary service categories and the larger
scale projects that need to take place from a service or technology perspective. It is in this vision
that the IT management team must collectively commit to applying Lean principles within the IT
organization, as an integral part of the vision.
Having agreed as a team as to the definition of True North, this collective commitment means that
managers will support each other in the application of Lean principles in the IT organization. From
this preliminary commitment to each other, each manager can commit to their self-development with
Lean IT being the core of that self-development.
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3 Committing to Self-Development
I never stopped trying to become qualified for the job
the process.
Lean leadership is based on True North values.
Values are personal and you should start with
self-development to internalize these values in
order to lead by the Lean Leadership principles.
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Do
The first thing Charlotte must do is gain insights from the work floor in what the team
actually does, and what the issues are that they face. An additional challenge is that this is
a completely new team, made up of IT engineers who previously have barely spoken to one
another, despite working on closely related topics. Together with the team, Charlotte develops
a vision of where the team needs to be and ensures that this vision is aligned with the overall
goals of the IT organization. Subsequently, she leads and coaches the team members to shift
their focus from their respective systems to a collective responsibility for delivering value to
the HR department.
Charlotte spends many hours sitting in the room, together with her team; simply observing
what happens. She coaches her team members in improving their interactions and
cooperation. She does this based on the collective vision of providing high value IT services to
support the HR processes.
Check
Charlotte regularly asks her team for feedback. She also involves her manager (her coach) in
helping to improve her capabilities as a team leader.
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when required. Lastly, a Leader Standard Work list contains a space for reminders. These tend to be
ad hoc activities that need to be carried out but are not yet standardized in such a way that they fit
into the other categories.
Leaders can plan their work to ensure they have space to work on improving the performance,
capabilities and quality of the IT services.
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3.11 Accountability
As we have seen, the act of self-development is
something that has far-reaching consequences.
Asking a Lean IT Leader to commit to selfdevelopment therefore means a conscious
decision to take the time to learn. Many
managers may think that, having spent years
in management roles, they can jump straight
to the Ri phase of Lean IT Leadership. This is
unlikely to work.
Lean IT Leadership means reviewing the values
according to which a leader leads. It means
taking the time to analyze the way leadership
work is done and, together with others,
determining how it can be done with more
focus on the real tasks of leadership and more
efficiently.
Lean IT leaders have not only a responsibility to
themselves, but also to their colleagues; they
lead by example and that example will influence
people. This brings responsibility and, especially,
accountability. The key difference between
responsibility and accountability, is that
accountability means, without necessarily being
asked, being prepared to offer an explanation
for attitude, behavior and actions.
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4.2 Go See
Genchi Genbutsu is the Toyota principle of Go
and see or seeing reality. It means going to
the source and truly seeing what is happening
there
This is where a huge problem lurks. What is
reality? We all see the world through our own
mental filters. We all interpret what we see. The
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Policy
o Which policies prevent the team
from achieving the goals?
People
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always assume that the error or lack of quality is the result of an error in the organizational system
(policy, process and technology). Even if it turns out that someone has not followed an agreed
procedure, the Lean IT Leader must understand what issue in the system allowed this to happen;
which oversight caused a person to not use the agreed procedure?
A well-known case of this problem is updating the Configuration Management Database (CMDB).
Everybody knows that keeping the CMDB up-to-date is critical for consistently delivering value to
customers. It ensures that we can fully understand the impact of a change or that we can investigate
a problem more easily. And yet, getting IT people to update the information as a result of changes, is
a major issue for many IT organizations.
A Why question can often be answered with multiple answers. Each answer should be supported
by evidence that proves the answer is right. Failure to do this may send the team on a wrong failure
path.
Step 1
Determine the exact location of the problem by asking Where? three times to
identify where the problem takes place.
Step 2
Make a table with two columns and five rows and write the question from the
problem statement at the top of the table
Step 3
Ask the question: Why did this happen? Find the answer, supported by evidence,
and write the answer in the left-hand column of the top row.
Step 4
Repeat this question and answer cycle, four more times. List the answers in the lefthand column of the table.
Step 5
Determine a solution for each of the answers and record these in the right-hand
column.
An aspect to keep in mind when asking why, is one of communication. Why is a word that,
depending on intonation, can have an inspiring and investigative character or a threatening character.
Leaders should, of course, try to be inspiring and investigative.
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4.5 IT Gemba
We have discussed what needs to be done at
the Gemba. The question is: what does the IT
Gemba look like?
If we take a birds eye view of an IT
organization, we can identify four distinct
parts of the IT Gemba: the software
development Gemba, the service desk Gemba,
the IT operations Gemba and the supporting
staff Gemba. These each have their own
characteristics.
Software development
This part of the IT Gemba is made up of
people principally working on changes to IT
services or creating new IT services. They are
strongly deliverable-oriented. Creating these
deliverables will entail both individual work
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(overburden) as well.
There is a need for the Lean IT Leader to analyze the need for and availability of skills and knowledge.
This can be done using a simple spreadsheet model.
Step
Action
Determine which skills and knowledge are required by the various roles in the team.
It is important to be complete in this section, without subdividing technical areas into
unworkably small units. However, there may be more than 20 knowledge areas.
Based on the workload (i.e. numbers of each unit of work) received by the team, the
necessary capacity and level of knowledge and skills can be determined. This is scored
using a 5 level ability scoring scale based on a persons ability in a certain area. The
scale is:
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Each member of the team scores his/herself on the various knowledge and skills
areas independently. The team leader completes the matrix as well. Note: When
scoring skills, it is important to be aware that the perception of ability in skills is
(generally speaking) more subjective than perception of knowledge.
Follow up with a short interview of each team member to validate the scores.
Combine all input into a single team sheet and share the overall results with the whole
team
The aim is to identify the gaps (and excesses) between the ideal team composition based on the
analysis of customer requirements of the team. Together with the team, the leader must determine
whether sufficient knowledge and skills are present in the team to ensure the team can deliver the
required customer value.
In most cases, there will be discrepancies between the available and required skills and knowledge.
The Lean IT Leader must challenge the team to initiate improvements where necessary. The skills and
knowledge analysis helps to provide a record of the state of the team, and all work done to share and
acquire knowledge must be recorded in the skills and knowledge analysis, through a regular update
of the analysis.
In a relatively immature IT organization, the analysis will uncover the fact that one person is at expert
level, most of the rest will be at the no knowledge level, with one or two people being at learning
level. This is a clear case of the imbalance of the availability of knowledge, and the team must work to
remedy the situation.
When defining the knowledge required by the team, everyone must be involved. The result is a
tailored list of knowledge per team. Leaders should share their knowledge analyses to see whether
there is untapped potential in other teams.
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5 Continuous Improvement
Good management is the art of making problems so interesting and their solutions so constructive
that everyone wants to get to work and deal with them (Paul Hawken)
To this point, we have looked at the Lean leadership in general, the context of IT, the steps to
committing to self-development and helping others to develop. These steps come together in the
cause of ensuring continuous improvement. This is, after all, the ultimate goal of Lean: to keep
improving the level of value delivered to customers.
One of the key characteristics of IT is that it is a team sport. Individuals do great things, but
customers get great IT services through the cooperation of people in teams to deliver the required IT
services.
When it comes to continuous improvement within IT organizations, it is therefore critical that Lean IT
Leaders ensure that this is done within teams.
Continuous improvement starts at the team level, where the value-added work is done. It is possible
only if people across the organization continually check their progress relative to goals and take
corrective actions to address problems they come across while trying to achieve these goals.
Lean IT team leaders tend to start as team members and rise by being able to perform all of the
teams tasks at a high level. They must also work on Kaizen projects meaning they are focused on
structured and disciplined problem-solving, and follow voluntary team leader skills training, i.e.
demonstrate the will to self-develop.
It is, thus, hugely important to cultivate strong team leaders and allow them, and their teams, to
have ownership of their area and its strengths and problems. In fact, experience has shown that
insufficient attention to the first level of management and leadership in the IT organization can be the
cause of poor service delivery. Team leaders represent the most critical coordination layer within the
IT organization.
We must therefore pay attention to their team-building and team-leading abilities.
5.1 Teams
As we saw earlier, the traditional form of IT organizations is a set of technically-oriented teams
doing their part of delivering the IT services. The word team is used quite easily to define a group of
technical people working together.
In their 1993 article, Katzenbach and Smith clearly define a team as: a team is a small number of
people with complementary skills who are committed to a common purpose, set of performance
goals, and approach for which they hold themselves mutually accountable.
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The table below shows how Katzenbach and Smith propose to identify the difference between a
team and a group.
Group
Team
Individual accountability
Table 4: What distinguishes a team from a group based on Katzenbach & Smith (2004). The discipline of teams
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5.2 Teams in IT
The average IT employee may work in a
number of teams on a daily basis. It is therefore
vital that every leader develops team-building
skills. Within IT organizations, teams are formed
along four lines:
F. Goal-sharing
D. Commitment
E. Accountability
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A. Improvement Kaizen
B. Daily Kaizen.
We will focus on Daily Kaizen in this publication
and we will only briefly discuss Improvement
Kaizen. Improvement Kaizen is focused on
carrying out Kaizen events to bring about
incremental change. Improvement Kaizen
is discussed in detail in the Lean IT Kaizen
publication.
A. Daily Kaizen
Daily Kaizen is more closely related to the
Kaizen mindset, because it means continuously
looking at the environment in which we
operate and changing things to make it easier
for the people in this environment to deliver
more customer value, more quickly and more
consistently. Why is daily Kaizen more closely
related to the Kaizen mindset? Because daily
Kaizen means being constantly alert to minor
(and major) issues that need to be addressed
directly and quickly.
Daily Kaizen is where the Lean IT Leader must
prove their value. When something needs to be
done on a daily basis, it can become part of the
routines and habits. It may even be forgotten,
with the comment that the team will pay
attention to it the following day, week, year and
so on.
A simple example of daily Kaizen is the
following. Imagine a printer on a table. The
paper for the printer is stacked in boxes, each
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tooling.
Using the 5S technique in the virtual
environment offers a unique challenge, simply
because everything looks neatly sorted in
computer systems. On closer inspection, the
Lean IT Leader usually can help teams to create
a more orderly work environment.
The 5S technique was explained in the Lean IT
Foundation publication. In summary:
1. Sort is about eliminating all
unnecessary tools, parts, and
instructions.
2. Simplify or Set in Order ensures that
everything has a right place.
3. Shine is very simply about keeping the
workspace and all equipment clean,
ordered and in the right place.
4. Standardize means defining the best
way of executing an activity.
5. Sustain means maintaining and
reviewing standards.
Investigating each of these aspects in relation
to each process step can help to ensure that
processes become more efficient through
simple improvements.
Carrying out each of these activities requires
translation to the virtual environment. In the IT
context, sorting, simplifying and shining can all
be used, for example, to describe the removal
of the often excessive amount of resolver
groups in an IT service management tool. These
tools tend to survive multiple re-organizations,
but end up having both the new resolver group
names and the old ones, possibly even the
ones before the recent re-organization. These
old resolver groups survive because old units
of work remain open. Lean IT Leaders must
ensure that the actions to unclutter the work
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Performance Indicators
Leaders within a Lean IT environment must
know where they stand in relation to their
goals. This must be based on facts derived
from the reality of the situation. These facts
are referred to as performance indicators. They
give a representation of the current state of the
performance of the IT organization in relation
to its goals and vision.
The performance indicators related to the IT
organizations strategic goals are called the Key
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6.3 Communication
Open, transparent communication lies at
the heart of the Lean way of working. There
are many sides to communication. In Lean
IT Leadership, we can identify 5 tools and
techniques that enhance the quality and
openness of communication throughout an
IT organization. Lean IT Leaders must be
proficient in each of these methods.
Jidoka
Jidoka is a principle concerned with ensuring
that leaders create an environment in which
problems cannot remain unseen. Jidoka means
giving the accountability to the work floor to
stop errors from going forwards in the process.
The Go-See principle is one of the most
powerful reminders of the need for jidoka and
the associated visual management.
Applying jidoka makes doing a Gemba walk
substantially more effective. Work and issues
are clearly visible on the basic set of visual
management boards: the Day Board, Week
Board and Improvement Board. On top of these
boards, the key processes should be visible in
the form of Value Stream Maps posted on the
walls.
Jidoka goes beyond just ensuring that
problems are uncovered. It also gives
employees the authority to stop the production
line as soon as a problem is identified.
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their effort of creating value for customers and enables continuous improvement.
Furthermore, humans are highly visually oriented beings. Much of our (inter-personal) communication
is based on what we see. Visual management is therefore vital for ensuring, enhancing and facilitating
communication (see Lean IT Foundation publication for further details).
Cascade
The second aspect of communication is ensuring that it flows to the place where it is needed. A
cascade of communication must be built within the organization. A cascade is a mechanism that
involves aligning meetings, so that the information shared in one meeting can quickly be brought to a
different meeting in which the information is needed.
The key to getting the cascade to work is to align the agendas of the various levels of management. It
is important to ensure that the upward and downward flow of information is optimized.
This means, for example, setting the time when all teams have their day starts. Most teams will have
their day start between 08:00 and 10: 00 in the morning. The team leaders will come together with
their manager at 11:00, and the management team may meet early in the afternoon. In this way,
issues from the work floor are transferred through the hierarchy of meetings as quickly as possible.
This means that information is communicated to the right level quickly. The meetings must be run in
such a way that the issues raised are dealt with promptly.
Ideally, this mechanism should work on a daily basis. However, experience has shown that running
this cascade once a week is sufficient in most organizations. The benefits of holding meetings once
a week include time being freed up during the rest of the week for managers to be available for
discussion of issues and problem-solving. Having the cascade in place reduces the time spent on
chasing decisions dramatically, because the flow of information is clear; everyone knows when they
can expect an answer. Issues and requests for help no longer get passed into (or stuck in) a black box.
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They are passed up the cascade and there is a clear expectation that the leaders will do the work for
which they are employed: to facilitate the work floor, particularly by removing mura and muri.
The greatest challenge to getting the cascade to work is actually emptying agendas and re-planning
the meeting structure. However, most agendas are relatively empty a number of weeks in the future.
By ensuring that the meeting structure is changed in the electronic agendas a number of weeks in
advance, people will have room for particular meetings taking place at different times.
Performance Dialogue
A performance dialogue is a specific way of discussing performance (see also the Lean IT Foundation
publication). Lean IT Leaders must master this technique to be effective. The performance dialogue
brings together a number of Lean behaviors: Goal-setting based on an integral and factual view of
the work, providing support, giving feedback, showing respect.
New and ongoing objectives are discussed between leader and employee. What are the mutual
expectations and how have these been defined? Unclear expectations are the most common cause
for disagreement between leader and employee. In the performance dialogue, specifically defined
objectives are discussed and agreed. These objectives should be SMART:
Specific
Measurable
Achievable
Relevant
Time-bound
To ensure valid criteria, the leader should be knowledgeable about the daily operation of the
team. That is one of the reasons that a leader should spend 50% of the time with the team in the
workplace.
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Using the Pyramid Principle means using a bottom-up approach for grouping arguments (A1.1 and
so on in the above figure) in a logical way that supports a motivation for the answer you give. Each
Answer should be supported by at least three clear motivations as to why this answer is the best
answer to the Key Question. The arguments and motivations will follow from the Analyze phase of a
Kaizen event. The Answer is the result of the Improve phase.
A useful technique in constructing an argumentation pyramid is MECE. This stands for
Mutually Exclusive: all items in a particular category belong only to that category and no other.
Collectively Exhaustive: all possibilities have been covered.
Example
In an IT context, suppose that we encounter a situation where there is a lack of satisfaction
with two applications. To do a sound analysis on the root cause of the lack of satisfaction we
need data. The data set will include a variety of calls from customers about these applications.
For the analysis, we would need to have each call put into a single category: the call may be an
incident, a service request, a request for information or a complaint. These categories must be
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Development
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This requires estimating the number of operational activities, incidents, problems, service requests
standard changes and non-standard changes that operations will need to execute on a weekly basis
to keep the new and existing services working. The input for the team is a set of well-defined quality
standards and Service Level Agreements, as they are agreed with the customers.
Service Desk
Visual management of the service desk will focus on understanding how customer interaction is being
handled:
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There is a strong focus on understanding which problems exist and which improvements need to be
carried out. During the day start, the service desk team will focus on special categories of calls, such
as:
The service desk will align with both the IT operations team and the software development team by
feeding back information regarding the usage of and problems with the new software. In addition,
they will present possible improvements to the way of working of the teams.
The team leaders must ensure that they collectively align the goals of the teams. All of the leaders
must have access to the same information, which should be available on the visual management
boards. Doing a Gemba walk together will help to identify issues throughout the entire value stream.
Leaders of the teams can work together in identifying and optimizing the value streams.
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7 Lean IT Transformation
We assume that you will start using Lean IT
from a position in which your IT organization is
run using traditional or western management
principles. In this chapter, we will discuss how
to start the Lean IT journey from a practical
perspective. What do you need to do to ensure
that the IT organization is able to work with
Lean principles?
We also assume that management of the IT
organization now understands and agrees
that Lean IT provides benefits in the delivery
of high-quality IT services at competitive cost
levels.
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This figure is very important for Lean IT Leaders. Firstly, they will be experiencing these phases
themselves. The process goes through shock that the business as usual world is changing. In many
cases, the denial of the change may take the form of the manager believing that they are experienced
and already carry out many Lean IT activities and, therefore, do not really need to change much.
Although, usually, this is not true.
As more and more new information about Lean IT enters the organization, the leader can feel
incompetent. This results in anger and frustration. Without support, the manager may become a
destructive rather than constructive force. It may help to realize that actually, the leader becomes
more competent in Lean IT Leadership, since she is now able to recognize all non-Lean behavior she
exhibits. As the leadership team helps one another to take the Lean IT Leadership steps, the new
reality becomes accepted. Through trying out new behaviors, the leader can define a new meaning
for herself, followed by the integration of Lean behaviors into day-to-day work.
Collectively going through the four Lean leadership steps facilitates the adoption of new behavior.
Particularly the foundation and structure offered by Leader Standard Work and daily Kaizen provide
a secure footing for the leader to go through the Shu-Ha-Ri process.
This experience will help the Lean IT Leader to relate to what people on the work floor are going
through. The idea is to show understanding and show the way forward, rather than joining in with
the complaining. Lean behavior is after all about identifying problems and looking for solutions on
a daily basis. And going back to the practices of yesterday is not a long-term solution, i.e. choosing
for Lean means letting go of many of the pre-Lean behaviors, even though it means hard work in
adopting the new Lean practices.
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In essence, Lean IT Leaders and their teams must go through three broad phases:
1. Farewell
2. Letting Go
3. Moving Forward
They must leave the current way of working (Farewell). This can be done by looking carefully at the
current situation and by putting the present and the past into perspective. The best way to do this is
to show respect for the efforts people have made and results they have achieved, and explain why
the new step is necessary. It is critical to spend time informing and communicating the vision for the
future. The Lean IT Leader must show understanding and sympathy for the loss people are likely to
feel.
The next step is to help the team to let go of the past (Letting Go). This is done by providing help,
support and motivation. One of the best ways to take this step is to engage the team in carrying out
long desired improvements that are in line with the Lean principles. The Lean IT Leader must continue
to inform, but should also reassure the team that the right steps are being taken.
Finally, the Lean IT Leader must help the team to move forward (Moving forward). This means
encouraging daily Kaizen and helping the individuals to develop further. In this step, the Lean IT
Leader must be clear about celebrating successes and ensuring that the team is supported in its
further development.
Finally, Lean IT Leaders must remember that what counts in the adoption of new technologies and
ideas, counts for the adoption of Lean IT as well. People will adopt Lean IT at different speeds. It is
well-known that people fall into one of five categories of adopters when it comes to adopting new
ideas and technologies, based on Rogers classification in Diffusion of Innovations:
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Innovators: these are the people who take the risk to first adopt new ideas. These people may
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The transformation must be designed at both an organizational and a team level. In this way, we can
provide everyone in the IT organization with the vision and a plan, and with a time in which they can
expect to get involved.
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The key result of the Lean Leadership phase is a common change story in which the urgency and
need for change are communicated, together with a vision for the future. Each leader has their
own change story. The Lean Leadership phase is obviously not just a phase. As we have seen, the
development of Lean IT Leaders is a continuous process. The Lean Leadership phase ensures that true
commitment is voiced and that the first iteration of Leader Standard Work is defined. The change
story, commitment and Leader Standard Work are the three anchors that ensure leaders can help
each other to stick to the changes agreed upon.
Organizational Level Step 2: Lean Transformation
The next phase at the organizational level is the transformation itself. This is the phase in which
teams are helped to adopt the Lean way of working.
It is important for the development of the teams that the leaders decide on whether teams go
through their initial transformation based on volunteering or whether the leaders determine a
roadmap in which the sequence of team transformation is dictated. In larger organizations, it is
often simply not feasible for all teams to start the transformation at the same time. The resources to
support the teams are simply not available. Transitioning large organizations usually involve so-called
waves.
If the transformation is carried out in waves, the waves should be logically sequenced. The teams
in a single wave will need to be selected in a non-random way. Key considerations for teams to be
in the same wave are whether teams are dependent on one another, whether they serve the same
customer or whether they form part of the same value stream.
If the transformation is taking place in a traditionally-organized IT organization, we will find a large
interconnectedness of the departments. The IT leadership may then choose to transform functional
areas one at a time, for instance first the development teams, then the IT operations teams (or the
other way round).
The transformation must ensure that teams are supported throughout the entire transformation
period. There is a risk that once the team of Lean IT experts helping the leaders to drive the
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This is a phase in which the team is helped to come to terms with the reality of their situation. This
means deep investigations into, at least, the following aspects:
Generally, the analysis step will cause the first three steps of the Lewis and Parker curve to happen
in the team. The team members will be faced with the reality of their situation, leading to denial
and potentially a feeling of incompetence. Therefore, it is vital to involve the team in the analyses.
Insight in the teams actual performance, combined with actual solutions will allow a beginning of an
internalized sense of why the transition is happening.
Often, the analysis will show a poorer performance than team members envisaged. There may be
some finger-pointing to other teams that are deemed to be the cause of the poor performance of the
team being analyzed. The team leader must help to manage the negative feelings or shock towards
carrying out improvements and taking control of the teams situation.
Team Level Step 3: Implement
The Analyze step is always slightly longer than strictly necessary to ensure that the team is ready
to make improvement steps in the Implement step. The Implement step is about embedding helping
others to develop and daily Kaizen in the team.
In parallel with appointing a Lean Coach, it is also a good idea to identify individuals within teams
having a personal interest in and passion for Lean. These persons should become a Kaizen Lead
through deeper Lean studies and practice. The Kaizen Lead will often be called upon to facilitate
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Improvement Kaizens and support the selection of Kaizen initiative from the improvement board.
The Lean IT Transformation plan for a team should be based on the five Lean dimensions as
presented in the Lean IT Foundation publication. These dimensions provide a clear basis for why
activities are carried out. It is important to show the team that the analysis and implementation
cover all aspects of Lean IT, which helps improve the confidence of the team. It also helps the team
to realize that, although it seems like there is a lot of work to be done, the work is spread out in an
achievable way within the timeframe set for the analysis and implementation.
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As the figure above shows, the top-down and bottom-up aspects principally ensure that
improvements are identified from both directions, thus ensuring a steady stream of improvement
projects to be carried out.
It is important to realize that because of the combination of styles, it is impossible to start the Lean
transformation without buy-in from both higher management and employees.
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8 Appendix A: A3 Thinking
The following section is an edited extract from
the Lean IT Kaizen publication.
One of the powerful tools that Toyota has
institutionalized within Lean is working with A3
reports. It supports and promotes continuous
improvement, and is based on the PDCA cycle.
A3
A3 simply refers to the size of a piece of paper.
A3 is 29,7 cm by 42 cm (11,7 in by 16,5 in). It is
twice the size of A4 and half the size of A2. The
beauty of the A3 sheet is that it provides enough
space to explain a relatively complicated story,
but limits the writer in their verbosity. The aim
of the A3 is to encourage conciseness in the
communication of a message. It also works as
a checklist to ensure strict adherence to the
chosen problem-solving methodology, in our case
DMAIC.
It is important to understand that there is no
hard and fast way to complete an A3 problemsolving sheet. Most A3 sheets tend to have 7
or 8 sections, as we will see below. However, if
you wish to have 5 sections focusing on DMAIC,
then this is acceptable. It is important that the
problem-solving A3 covers the complete PDCA
cycle. The key determinants for a good A3 sheet
are:
Does it help the team compiling it to follow a
structured problem-solving method?
Does it help people who need to take action on
the outcome, to understand the logic that led to
the outcome?
Contents of a Problem-solving A3
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In their book Understanding A3 Thinking, Sobek and Smalley describe two other forms of A3 report:
the A3 Status report and the A3 Proposal report. These are again variations on the above themes,
but with different goals.
A3 Status Report
The A3 status report is aimed at informing all stakeholders of the progress of the execution of a
longer-running project or action. This type of A3 is not some much focused on analysis, rather it aims
to continually check whether the assumptions made continue to be correct and ensure that it is clear
which actions need to be taken. An A3 status report will tend to focus on the Check and Act aspects
of the PDCA cycle.
The key components of the A3 status report are:
Background: in this section, the context is described. This may be a concise version of the problemsolving A3 for which the A3 is a status report.
Current Conditions: Here, the progress of the project is described. The changes that have already
been made are described.
Results: This is the key section of an A3 status report. The current conditions are the consequence
of actions taken. These actions have led to results. It is the results on which the decisions are taken
whether to continue and, if so, which course of action to take.
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9 Appendix B: References
9.1 Developing Lean Leaders at all Levels
Authors: Jeffrey Liker with George Trachilis
ISBN number: 978-0-9914932-0-3
Publisher: Lean Leadership Institute Publications
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10 Appendix C: Glossary
Term
Description
5S
A set of hygiene rules that help to, for lack of a better word, clean up
processes and workplaces
A3
A3 Problem-solving
Report
A3 Proposal
A3 Status Report
Accountability
Analysis
Andon
Application
Development
Baseline
Cascade
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Catch-ball
communication
Change Story
Considers how changes within the system ripple across the value
stream, affecting the work and behavior of other employees in the
same department, in other departments, external customers, suppliers,
and other stakeholders
Configuration
Management
Database (CMDB)
Constancy of Purpose
Continuous
Improvement
Cross-functional
Alignment
Customer
The person or group of people who use your product or service OR the
person next in line in the value stream.
Customer Value
Daily Kaizen
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Day board
Board used to share information and updates within the team. The Day
board is used during the Day start (also Kanban Board); an element of
Visual Management
Definition of Done
DevOps
DMAIC
Acronym for the five steps in problem solving with Kaizen, i.e.: Define,
Measure, Analyze, Improve and Control.
Dynamic thinking
External IT
Organization
Five Whys.
Flow
Flow efficiency
Gemba
The place where the work is done. Within a Lean context, Gemba simply
refers to the location where value is created
Genchi genbutsu
Ha
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Habit
Holistic thinking
Horizontal Alignment
Hoshin Kanri
Humility
Having a clear perspective and respect for one's place in context. The
concept of humility addresses intrinsic self-worth, relationships and
socialization as well as perspective
Improvement Board
Improvement Kaizen
Incident
Internal IT
Organization
Ishikawa diagram
IT Operations
Jidoka
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Kaizen
Kaizen board
Kaizen Mindset
Kata
Leader Standard
Work (LSW)
MECE
Muda
Mura
Muri
Nemawashi
PDCA Cycle
Performance Dialogue
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Performance Indicator
Plan-Build-Run
Principle
Pyramid Principle
Resource efficiency
Ri
Sensei
Service Desk
Service Manager
Shu
Shu-Ha-Ri
Lean learning cycle. Model of learning based on the kata. The process of
self-development is guided by the principle of Shu-Ha-Ri
SIPOC
Solution Matrix
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Standard work
Systemic thinking
Team
Transformation
True North
T-type leader
Vertical Alignment
Visual Management
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VSM
Wave
Week board
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