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The Friction Project

🔵 Käsillä on eräänlainen kitkanpoisto-opas! Amerikkalaiseen bisneskirjatyyliin se on hyvällä täynnä oppeja ja tee näin-ohjeita, vaikka onkin kahden tutkijan kirjoittama. 

🟢 Kitkaa syntyy koska:

  • Johtajien myrkyllisyydestä: Voimakas asema voi johtaa siihen, että johtajat eivät huomaa alaistensa kohtaamia haasteita tai eivät ymmärrä, kuinka heidän päätöksensä vaikuttavat muihin.
  • Byrokratiasta: Liialliset säännöt, prosessit ja kokoukset voivat hidastaa päätöksentekoa ja tehdä työnteosta tehotonta.
  • Kommunikaation puutteesta: Epäselvä viestintä ja jargonin käyttö voivat aiheuttaa väärinymmärryksiä ja viivästyttää projekteja.
  • Epäluottamuksesta: Epäluottamus johdon tai kollegoiden välillä voi estää yhteistyötä ja innovaatioita.

🟢 Pääviesti on, että kitka on organisaatiossa orpo. Ensimmäinen ja tärkein tehtävä on pelastaa orvot. 

🟢 Kitkan poistaminen käytännössä:

  • Kill Byrokratia: Tarpeettomia prosesseja ja sääntöjä tulee karsia. Ja siitä palkitseminen.
  • Johtajien rooli: Johtajien tulee olla tietoisia omasta vaikutuksestaan ja pyrkiä ymmärtämään alaistensa kokemuksia.
  • Make luottamus, not kitka: Luottamus ja avoin keskustelu ovat tärkeitä yhteistyön kannalta.
  • Viestinnän parantaminen: Selkeä, avoin, jopa liiallinen viestintä on tärkeää.
  • Innovaatioiden tukeminen: Organisaatioissa tulee kannustaa uusien ideoiden syntymistä ja kokeilemista.

🟢 Monissa organisaatioissa väärät asiat ovat liian helppoja ja oikeat asiat liian vaikeita. Case-yrityksiä kirjassa ovat mm. Google Glassin epäonnistuminen, Waze-liikennesovelluksen kompurointi ja hollantilainen Jumbo-kauppaketjun hidas kassalinjastot.

🟢 Kirjan keskeiset opit:

– Kitkan vähentäminen vaatii jatkuvaa työtä (”kuin ruohon leikkaamista”)

– Kitkan vähentäminen on kaikkien vastuulla, ei vain johdon

– Organisaatiot ovat muokattavissa olevia prototyyppejä, joita voi ja pitää kehittää

– Keskity ongelmien korjaamiseen, älä syyllisten etsimiseen

– Palkitse niitä jotka ehkäisevät ongelmia, älä vain ”palomiehiä”

– Vältä ”poseeraajia”, jotka puhuvat mutta eivät toimi

🔴 Kuusi sanaa: “After the revolution, who’s going to pick up the garbage on Monday morning?” (Mierle Laderman Ukeles)

P.S. Kirjassa on hauska tarina kun Harvard Business Review haastatteli Jerry Seinfeldiä ja toista pitkäaikaisen hittikomediashown kirjoittajaa. Toimittajat kysyivät häneltä kirjoittajien loppuunpalamisesta: ”Olisiko ollut olemassa kestävämpää tapaa tehdä se? Olisiko McKinsey-konsultit tai joku muu voinut auttaa sinua löytämään paremman mallin?” Seinfeld ei tuntenut McKinseytä ja saatuaan tietää, että McKinsey on konsulttiyritys eivätkä he ole hauskoja, niin Seinfeld sanoi: “Then I don’t need them. If you’re efficient, you’re doing it the wrong way. The right way is the hard way.”

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Nuts & Bolts

🔵 Mitä sanottiin ensimmäisessä puhelussa? Ja kuka keksi pyörän? Tämä kirja kertoo näistä ja muista insinöörityön tuloksista. Periaatteessa kirja kertoo seitsemästä innovaatiosta ja sen vaikutuksesta, mutta käytännössä kirja kertoo insinöörityön inhmillistä tarinaa

🟢 Seitsemän keksintöä, jotka ilmentävät suunnittelun ihmeitä ja ovat kehittyneet kokeilujen sekä erehdysten kautta: 

1)köysi (Ranska 50 000 eKr) ja 

2)pyörä (Mesopotamia 3900 eKr) 

3)Naula (Egypti 3400 eKr)

4)pumppu (Mesopotamia 3000 eKr). 

5)magneetti (Kreikka 600-luku eKr, 

6)linssi (Kreikka 424 eKr), 

7)jousi (Mongolia 1100-luvulla), 

🟢 Jokainen keksintö vastaa ihmisten perustarpeisiin: naula liittää, pyörä mahdollistaa liikkeen, jousi varastoi energiaa, magneetti manipuloi etäältä, linssi ohjaa valoa, köysi tarjoaa vahvaa ja taipuisaa materiaalia ja pumppu liittyy nesteiden liikuttamiseen. 

🟢 Keksintöjen tarinat korostavat innovaation moninaisuutta maailman eri aikakausilla ja alueilta sekä tuovat esiin vähemmän tunnettuja insinöörejä.

🟢 Insinöörin taideteos on syntynyt prosessin kautta, jossa on epäonnistumista ja uudelleenkäyntiä. Meillä on tarve kehittää yhteiskuntaa, joka kannustaa kokeiluun ja epäonnistumiseen sekä sellaiseen elämään joka ei leimaa epäonnistumista heikkoudeksi.

🟢 Keskeiset opit tekstistä ovat seuraavat:

  • Epäonnistuminen on osa insinöörityötä. Menestykseen pääseminen vaatii usein lukuisia yrityksiä ja epäonnistumisia.
  • Insinöörityö on inhimilliastä. Se kertoo siitä, miten ihmiset ovat vastanneet tarpeisiinsa ja ratkaisseet ongelmiaan kekseliäisyydellä.
  • Insinöörityöllä on potentiaalia muuttaa maailmaa paremmaksi. Insinöörit voivat kehittää ratkaisuja ympäristöongelmiin, parantaa terveydenhuoltoa ja tehdä elämästämme helpompaa ja mukavampaa.

🟢 Mutta ennen kaikkea – tulevaisuudessa tarvitsemme insinöörejä, jotka voivat ymmärtää ympäristöä ja pelastaa maapallon.

🟢 Graham Bell soitti Lyceum Hallissa Massachusetts soitti avustajalleen Thomas Watsonille puhelun 12.2.1877, joka meni seuraavasti: ”Mr Watson, can you hear me? Yes sir, I hear you”, jonka jälkeen Watson lauloi yleisölle. 

🟢 Pyörän keksivät sumerilaiset Mesopotamian alueelle 3900 eKr., mutta Yamnayan heimo kaupallisti pyörän tuoden sen Eurooppaan. Pyörän ansiosta yamnayan kieli elää vielä mm. englannin, sanskrit, kreikan, latinan, pashton, bulgarian ja saksan kielessä.

🟢 Ihmiset eivät ole keksineet kaikkea. Esimerkiksi ensimmäisenä köyden keksivät neandertalit. Kaakkois-Ranskassa, Ardèche-joen lähellä sijaitsevassa laaksossa nimeltään Abri du Maras, tiedetään neandertalien asuneen pitkiä aikoja keskisellä paleoliittisella kaudella (n. 300 000–30 000 vuotta sitten). Arkeologit ovat löytäneet pienen pieni köydenpätkä, vain 6,2 mm pitkä, joka on peräisin 41 000–52 000 vuoden takaa.

🔴 Kuusi sanaa kirjasta: ”Insinööri voi johtaa meidät siihen keitä haluamme olla.”

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Grove: High Output Management

🔵 Kumpi on parempi – tehdä töitä tehokkaasti vai hyvin? No tietenkin tehokkaasti, koska kirjoittaja on OKR-ajattelun (Objective Key Results) isä. Heitän heti alkuun lukusuosituksen, koska kirja täydentää hienosti Robert Noycen kirjaa.

✅ Kirjan hilpein osuus on kun Grove kertoo kuinka mielikuvituksellista aamupalatehdasta pitäisi johtaa.

✅ Henkilöstön kehittämiseen Grove suhtautuu intohimoisesti ja se näkyy kirjassa käytettyistä sivumääristä. Hänen periaatteensa ovat valtaisan kannatettavia. Esimerkiksi:
– Henkilöä ylennetään niin pitkään kunnes heidän kyvykkyydet loppuvat.
– Esihenkilön kaksi työtä on huolehtia tiiminsä valmentamisesta sekä motivaatiosta.

✅ Kirjan perusideat ovat:
– Tulosohjatun johtamisen oppiminen.
– Johtajan tulos syntyy tiimissä.
– Tehtäväkohtainen palaute on vakuutus tuloksellisuudelle.

✅ Groven johtamisen kaava = Tieto + nudge + päätöksenteko

✅ Viisi mittaria, joita Grove katsoo heti aamulla:
1. Myyntiennuste.
2. Materiaalit. 
3. Laitteet. 
4. Henkilöstö. 
5. Laatu.

✅ Kirjoittaja ei usko ”moka on lahja”-hokemaan, koska hänen mielestään mokailut maksaa joko asiakas tai omistaja. Groven vastaus mokailuun on esihenkilöiden tekemä valmennus.

✅ Aijoo. Unohtui sanoa – one-to-one tapaamiset ovat Groven aikaansaannoksia ja se oli Intelin esihenkilötyön ytimessä. Ja johtajan keskeinen tehtävä on joka tunti huolehtia siitä, että tuottaa tiiminsä kanssa lisäarvoa. Siis jokainen työtunti.

🔴 Kirjoittajan motto: “Let chaos reign, then rein in chaos.”

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Cote: Winning now, winning later

Kirjasta

Tämä tarina voisi olla Veli-Matti Mattilan kirjoittama. Coten aikana Honeywellin markkina-arvo kasvoi 20:sta 120 miljardiin ja generoi 800 %:n tuotot.

Minkälainen kirja oli?

“Business is 1 percent strategy and 99 percent execution.”

Coten antaa hyvän mahdollisuuden vertailla omia tapoja johtaa. Ja siksi kirja on hyvä itsereflektiokirja kaikille johtaja-ammatissa toimiville henkilöille. Käytännössä ei ole olemassa unviversaalia ratkaisua – jolla johtajuus saadaan toimimaan, niin lukemalla pystyy oppimaan toisten toiminnasta. Siksikin Coten johtamisopit sopivat ensisijassa hänelle ja meille muille lähinnä vertailukohtana.

Parasta kirjassa ovat Coten neuvot sekä kokemukset yritysostojen tekemiseen ja erityisesti miten liittää ostetut yritykset osaksi operatiivista liiketoimintaa.

Huonointa kirjassa oli erilaisten minä-minä-minä -muodossa olevien saavutusten esittely. Tapa, joka ei millään tavalla sovi pohjoismaiseen.

Kirja oli Financial Timesin vuoden bisneskirjakilpailun pitkällä listalla.

Mitkä ovat kirjan keskeiset ideat? 

Coten periaatetta lyhyen ja pitkän tähtäimen tuloksesta ovat:

– Kasva pitämällä kulut kurissa.

– Investoi tulevaisuuteen, mutta ei ylettömästi.

– Harjaa taloushallinto- ja bisneskäytännöt huolellisesti toimiviksi.

Coten johtamisopin mukaan mukaan johtajalla pitää olla teoria ja sen läpi kun katsoo tulevaisuuteen niin näkee miten organisaation kannattaa toimia. Vähän niinkuin Clayton Christensenillä opettaa videolla “How to think?” (aloita kohdasta 4:46) https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=qDrMAzCHFUU

Johtajuudessa Cote näkee kolme tehtävää:

  1. Saada suuret joukot toimimaan. (Inspiroiva johtajuus)
  2. Osata näyttää suuntaa. (Visionäärisyys)
  3. Tavoite pitää olla huolellisesti toimeenpantu. (Toimeenpano)

Inspiroiva johtajuus on vain 5% työstä. Kaksi jälkimmäistä vie valtaosan ajasta.

Luin hiljattain Reed Hastingsin johtamiskokemuksista kirjan ja nyt oli erinomainen mahdollisuus vertailla Netflixin ja Honeywellin toimitusjohtajan menetelmiä. Ne eroavat kuin yö ja päivä. Reunaehtona pitää huomioida, että Hastings kertoi milloin hänen johtamisoppinsa eivät ole validit, ja paikoitellen Coten liiketoiminta voisi olla sitä:

”With this in mind, you can consider your objective carefully before deciding when to opt for freedom and responsibility and when rules with process would be a better choice. Here are a set of questions you can ask in order to select the right approach:

• Are you working in an industry where your employees’ or customers’ health or safety depends on everything going just right? If so, choose rules and process.

• If you make a mistake, will it end in disaster? Choose rules and process.

• Are you running a manufacturing environment where you need to produce a consistently identical product? Choose rules and process.

Näiden varoitussanojen jälkeen voidaankin aloittaa vertailu:

  • Hastingsin (Netflix) pääperiaate oli ”not making decisions”, kun taas Coten pääperiaate oli ”making great decisions”.
  • Cote edustaa enemmän konserihallinto-näkökulmaa kuin Hastings…. ”In my experience, organizations can generally outsource between 30 and 70 percent of what they do.”
  • Cote ja Hastings ovat johtajina valon spektrin eri päädyt – olkoon Cote punainen ja Hastings violetti. Cote on minä-ihminen ja Hastings on me-ihminen…. (”I embarked on a restructuring plan ….. I only made thanks to ….. I also invested heavily in.)
  • Cote: ”The idea that as a leader you can focus on strategy and delegate its implementation to great people is a fallacy.”
  • Hastings: “”Reduce controls. Start by ripping pages from the employee handbook. Travel policies, expense policies, vacation policies—these can all go.”
  • Cote on nanomanageeraaja ja Hastings on metamanageeraaja. Cote näkee itsensä jonkulaisensa suorituskykykuraattorina tai -valmentajana. Hastings bisnesenkelinä.

Honeywellin strategiassa keskityttiin Coten aikana:

1. Kasvuun

2. Tuottavuuteen

3. Käteiseen

4. Ihmisiin

5. Kehitysaihioihin

Toinen minkä hän lanseerasi oli Honeywell Operating System, joka oli eräänlainen Six Sigma-menetelmä.

Mitä meidän pitäisi tehdä kirjan perusteella?

Perehtyä lisää Honeywellin yritysjärjestelyihin.

Mitä minun pitäisi itse tehdä? 

Mukava lisä Coten kirjassa on lukusuositukset, joita hän antaa. Esimerkiksi hän suosittelee luettavaksi HBR:n artikkelin ”Whos got the monkey?” https://hbr.org/1999/11/management-time-whos-got-the-monkey. Kirjana jän suosittelee luettavaksi Robert Rubinin kirjan ”In an Uncertain World”.

Yhteenveto

Kuusi sanaa: “Progress occurs because of the irrational demands of general management.”

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Joyce Nilsson Orsini: The Essential Deming

Kirjasta

W. Edward Demingiä pidetään laatuajattelun kanta-isänä. Hän yhdistää tilastotieteellisen ajattelun omiin johtamis-menetelmiin. Oikeasti Deming oli aikansa punk-rokkari ja kasvuhakkeri.

Halusin lukea hänen kirjan, koska hänen ajatteluunsa viitataan usein. Kirjaan oli koottu Demingin näkemyksiä kirjeistä ja luennoista. Lukijan kannalta se oli hankala valinta, koska esimerkiksi kirjeiden sisältö oli kirurgin tarkka leikkaus tiettyyn aiheeseen.

Minkälainen kirja oli?

”The greater the productivity, the better the economic lot of everybody. This is a simple principle and it is learned in Japan at an early age” lause kertoo kaiken kirjasta. Demingin kirja on yhtälö hänen laatuajattelun sekä hänen kokemuksiaan Japanin loikasta teollistuneiden maiden kärkisijoille. 

Pakko silti myöntää – kirja oli sekava. Demingin ajattelun erinomaisuus kompensoi sekavuutta.

Mitkä ovat kirjan keskeiset ideat? 

Demingin salaisuus on uskollisissa asiakkaista. Hänen mukaan voitto ja kasvu tulee asiakkaista, jotka “kehuvat” yrityksen tuotteita.

”Satisfied customers are not the answer. A satisfied customer may switch. Profit and merit come from loyal customers. A loyal customer waits in line and brings a friend with him.”

Toiseksi Demingin mukaan kaikenlaiset meriittijärjestelmät tuhoavat yrityksen. Kiintiöt, bonukset, yksittäiset tavoitteet jne ovat tuhon alku. Hänen mukaansa ainoastaan parempi johtajuus on mitä yritykset tarvitsevat.

Laadunparannuksella voidaan aikaan saada kykyä investoida kasvuun. Sitä voisi kutsua Demingin kolmioksi – “Quality is improved in three ways:

1. Through innovation in design of a product or service,

2. Through innovation in processes, and

3. Through improvement of existing processes.”

Huono johtaminen

Huono johtaminen on Demingin kirjassa jatkuvasti esillä. Hänellä on loputtoman oloinen lista johdon virheistä – The wrong style of management:

• Management of failure (too late). It is better to work on the causes of failure. Failures are not causes; they come from causes.

• Tampering with a stable system. For example, track down anything that goes wrong with a product or service. This policy does not improve the system. It is tampering, worsening the problem.

• Compile a list or chart to show percentages right or percentages of product or service that went wrong last month.

• Annual appraisal of performance, the so-called merit system – a destroyer of people. • Annual rating of divisions. (A manager of a division is rewarded on the basis of this rating.) • Campaign to reduce costs—as if costs were causes. • Incentive pay, commissions and bonuses.

• Top management failing to understand their responsibility for quality, for innovation of product and processes and for improvement of processes. Quality starts in the boardroom.

• Short-term planning and quick profit.

• Churning money.

• Competition without cooperation. Getting a bigger slice of the pie, but not making the pie bigger.

• Doing business by price tag.

• Short-term contracts.

• Management by objectives (MBO) or management by the numbers.

• Investment in gadgets, computers, automation and new machinery without guidance of profound knowledge.

• Posters and slogans for the workforce.

• Work standards—quotas. They double the cost of production, rob people of pride of workmanship and are a barrier to improvement.

Esimerkki hän sanoo, että: “Our people in the plants are responsible for their own product and quality. We expect them to act like owners.”

Johtamisparadoksi

Toinen hyvä johtamisparadoksi on, että numeraalinen tavoite ilman menetelmää on huonoa johtamista…. ”The worst example of numerical goals came out of our own Department of Education. Numerical goals. No method. No method suggested. Just numerical goals drawn out of the sky. Such nonsense in high places.”

Dmingin polku

Demingin tekstistä on helppo keksiä erilaisia loogisia ajattelukulkuja. Esimerkiksi Demingin polku tai enemmänkin ketjureaktio on seuraavanlainen:

Improve quality → Costs decrease because of less rework, fewer mistakes, fewer delays, snags; better use of machine-time and materials → Productivity Improves → Capture the market with better quality and lower price → Stay in business → Provide jobs and more jobs.

14 kohtaa

Demingin liikkeenjohdon teoria perustuu seuraavaan 14 kohtaan:

Point 1

Create constancy of purpose toward improvement of product and service, with the aim to become competitive and to stay in business, and to provide jobs.

Point 2

A new theorem: I’m afraid that it’s new in a lot of American industry. Dependability of service is an important quality characteristic. Reliable service reduces cost. Delays and mistakes raise cost.

Point 3

Cease dependence on inspection to achieve quality. Eliminate the need for inspection on a mass basis by building quality into the product in the first place.

Point 4

End the practice of awarding business on the basis of price tag. Instead, minimize total cost. Move toward a single supplier for any one item, on a long-term relationship of loyalty and trust. ….. One company that I work with is reducing their number of vendors from 4,000 to 800, and they are allowing themselves five years. (Toimittajan vaihtaminen maksaa liikaa….)

Point 5

Improve constantly and forever the system of production and service, to improve quality and productivity, and thus constantly decrease costs.

Point 6

Institute training on the job. Use effective methods by which you can improve the system. People are part of the system. Management could improve the system by making it possible for people to understand better what is acceptable and what is not.

Point 7

Institute leadership. The aim of supervision should be to help people and machines and gadgets to do a better job. Supervision of management is in need of overhaul, as well as supervision of production-workers.

Point 8

Drive out fear, so that everyone may work effectively for the company.

Point 9 <= siilojen murtaminen / tear dow the pyramid

Break down barriers between departments. People in research, design, sales, and production must work as a team, to foresee problems of production and in use that may be encountered with the product or service.

Point 10

Eliminate slogans, exhortations, and targets for the work force asking for zero defects and new levels of productivity. Such exhortations only create adversarial relationships, as the bulk of the causes of low quality and low productivity belong to the system and thus lie beyond the power of the work force.

Point 11

(a) Eliminate work standards (quotas) on the factory floor. Substitute leadership.

(b) Eliminate management by objective. Eliminate management by numbers, numerical goals. Substitute leadership.

Point 12

(a) Remove barriers that rob the hourly worker of his right to pride of workmanship. The responsibility of supervisors must be changed from sheer numbers to quality.

(b) Remove barriers that rob people in management and in engineering of their right to pride of workmanship. This means, inter alia, abolishment of the annual or merit rating and of management by objective.

Point 13

Institute a vigorous program of education and self-improvement.

Point 14

Put everybody in the company to work to accomplish the transformation. The transformation is everybody’s job.

Teoria

Demingin teorian 14 kohtaa tuli hänen kokemuksistaan. ”The 14 points of management” -perustuu neljään tekijään:

–      Variaatioon, jota Deming muuten fanitti pitkin tekstiään.

–      Systeemiajatteluun, koska johtaminen on systeemien johtamista.

–      Tiedolla johtamiseen, ei mutu-tietoon.

–      Psykologiaan, koska se auttaa ymmärtämään ihmisiä.

Milloin Demingin teoria tuottaa tuloksia:

• Pikavoittoja on tiedossa kun työlle saadaan määriteltyä standardeja (No. 11).

• Keskipitkän aikavälin voittoja on saatavilla jos pelko onnistutaan poistamaan organisaatiosta (No. 8)

• Pitkäkestoiset voitot saavutetaan kun siilot murtuvat (No. 9), mutta sen jälkeen voittoja on vaikea estää Demingin mukaan.

Mutta onko yrityksillä varaa Demingin ajatuksiin? Koska tuloksia hän ennustaa syntyvän 5-10 vuoden kuluessa. ”Unmistakable advances will be obvious within 5 years, more in 10.”

Hyvät uutiset

Hyvät uutiset sen sijaan on, että työn ilo voidaan aikaan saada nopeasti, jos ihmiset saadaan ymmärtämään kuinka tärkeää heidän työnsä on ja tieto miten heidän työnsä vaikuttaa. Siihenkin Demingillä oli menetelmä, jota hän kutsui “The Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) Cycle is a flow diagram for learning”:

1. The first step is plan: ideas in people’s heads about improvement or innovation, new method or comparison of methods.

2. Step two. Do it, carry out the test, comparison, or experiment, preferably on a small scale, according to the layout decided in step one.

3. Step three. Study the results. Do they correspond with hopes and expectations?

4. Step four. Act, if we get that far. And what do we mean by act? We mean adopt a change, or abandon it, or run through the cycle again, possibly under different environmental conditions.

Kuusi tapaa

Kuusi tapaa, jolla Deming suositteli käyttämään tilastollisia menetelmiä laatujohtamisessa:

A. Not how much product, but how much acceptable product is what counts.

B. The only way to get a critical dimension right, and to know that it is right 100 percent, is to know that it is being made at a safe distance from the required tolerances in the first place.

C. Safety, economy, and quality assurance all require specification in terms of a distribution.

D. How much variation can you take out of your product, and how much improvement can you achieve without making expensive changes in your equipment or raw material? The statistical method helps to answer these questions.

E. Statistical control furnishes a rational basis for deciding whether specifications should be changed.

F. Two problems are always present in the production or purchase of materials; Problem A. What to do with this lot? (Accept it, reject, pass, scrap, rework, regrade, or further inspect it before deciding which to do.) Problem B. What to do with the process? (Leave it alone; or look for some identifiable cause, make some adjustment, use different raw materials; carry out more or less inspection than you have been doing on previous lots.)

G. There are two kinds of mistakes occasionally made in any quality control program: 1. Looking for an assignable cause of variation or increasing the amount of inspection, when the variations in quality are only random. 2. Failing to look for an assignable cause of variation, or failing to increase the amount of inspection, when an assignable cause actually did exist.

H. Each point on the control chart is derived from inspection tests carried out on a supposedly homogeneous batch of product.

I. It is the responsibility of every industrial executive to acquire an appreciation of the fundamental principles underlying the statistical method. Then when statistical methods are used in. his plant the organization must be such that action can and will be taken when need is indicated by the control chart.

J. Control chart uses include the following problems: Mass production in the usual sense is not necessary to their use. Most of them can be handled satisfactorily in no other way.

Japanin teollisuuden loikka

Japanin teollisuuden loikkaan oli yhdeksän syytä Demingin mukaan:

1. Genuine and resolute determination on the part of management to improve quality. 2. Confidence in their ability to lead Japanese industry forth from the bad reputation that Japanese products had built up in the past, confidence in Japanese scientific ability, and confidence in Japanese skills. Confidence also, I might add, in statistical methods.

3. They were Japanese, with industrial experience, and with an inbred pride of workmanship.

4. Japanese top management, statisticians, and engineers, learned the statistical control of quality in the broad sense of Shewhart, as defined further on.

5. Management took immediate interest and learned something about the techniques of the statistical control of quality as well as about the possible results, and still more about what their own responsibilities would be. Proper arrangements for contact with top management, at the outset, was one of the fortunate features of statistical education in Japan.

6. Statistical education became a continuing process. Statistical methods cannot be installed once for all and left to run, like a new carpet or a new dean. They require constant adaptation, revision, extension, new theory, and new knowledge of the statistical properties of materials. Perhaps the main accomplishment in the eight-day courses that began in 1950 was to impart inspiration to learn more about statistical methods.

7. The Japanese learned the difference between a statistical problem and one in engineering, chemistry, management, or marketing. They learned that statistical knowledge is not a substitute for knowledge of engineering or of other subject-matter, and that knowledge of engineering does not solve statistical problems.

8. Japanese manufacturers took on the job themselves. They did not look to their government nor to ours for help. When they arranged for consultation, they sent a ticket and a cheque. They gave financial and moral support to statistical education, mainly through the Union of Japanese Scientists and Engineers.

9. Suggestions and technical information have a fairly clear channel from lower to higher levels of supervision and management. A Japanese executive is never too old or too successful to listen to the possibility of doing it a better way.

Mitä meidän pitäisi tehdä kirjan perusteella?

1) Variaation johtaminen on Demingin keskeisiä ajatuksia – kuinka hyvin onnistuu ennustamaan variaatiota ja johtamaan sitä. Variaation kutistaminen eli tasalaatuisuuden tavoite oli Demingille keskeistä: “Understanding variation is critical to good management. Take the idea of continual improvement, which says that the only way you can improve a process is to continuously shrink the variation.”

2) Variaation lisäksi toinen keskeinen teema on ihmiset….. “If you understand how people work in a system, and treat people as part of that system, quality of your products and services will improve.”

Mitä minun pitäisi itse tehdä? 

Opetella toimimaan Demingin johtamisen määritelmän mukaan….. “Leadership and Management of People What is a leader? As I use the term here, the job of a leader is to accomplish transformation of his organization. He possesses knowledge; he himself has been transformed. He has personality and persuasive power. How may he accomplish transformation?

1. First he has theory. He understands why the transformation would bring gain to his organization and to all the people that his organization deals with, the customers, suppliers, environment.

2. Second, he feels compelled to accomplish the transformation as an obligation to himself and to his organization.

3. Third, he is a practical man. He has a plan, step by step.”

Mitä muuta opin Demingistä? Tilastotieteellisen lähestymistavan hyödyntämistä johtamistyössä.

Yhteenveto

Kirja kuudella sanalla:

“Paper profits do not make bread: improvement of quality and productivity do.”

”Everyone Doing His Best Is Not the Answer”

”There Is No Substitute for Knowledge (Information Is Not Knowledge)”

”Deming would point at tables of data and say, “Tons of figures—no knowledge.”

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Collins & Hansen: Great by Choice

About the book

I just the love Mr. Jim Collins and his research team has conducted. No man on earth has made as much as Mr. Collins to help leaders to stay on track. The current business systems wouldn’t be the same without his insights, creative writings and evidence based analysis. We can easily promote Jim Collins to the same category as Peter Drucker.

“One should… be able to see that things are hopeless and yet be determined to make them otherwise.” —F. Scott Fitzgerald

What are the key learnings?

Key question… “What does it take to build a great company?”

This is the recipe…. “Bill Gates didn’t just get a lucky break and cash in his chips. He kept pushing, driving, working:

1)   staying on a 20 Mile March;

2)   firing first bullets, then big calibrated cannonballs;

3)   exercising productive paranoia to avoid the Death Line;

4)   developing and amending a SMaC recipe;

5)   hiring great people;

6)   building a culture of discipline; never deviating from his monomaniacal focus—and sustained his efforts for more than two decades.”

1 THRIVING IN UNCERTAINTY

Meaning of the book…. “All of this led us to a simple question: Why do some companies thrive in uncertainty, even chaos, and others do not? We began the nine-year research project behind this book in 2002, when America awoke from its false sense of stability, safety, and wealth entitlement.”

“We selected on performance plus environment for two reasons:

1)   First, we believe the future will remain unpredictable and the world unstable for the rest of our lives, and we wanted to understand the factors that distinguish great organizations, those that prevail against extreme odds, in such environments.

2)   Second, by looking at the best companies and their leaders in extreme environments, we gain insights that might otherwise remain hidden when studying leaders in more tranquil settings.”

FINDING THE 10X CASES

“We spent the first year of our efforts identifying the primary study set of 10X cases, searching for historical cases that met three basic tests:

1)   The enterprise sustained truly spectacular results for an era of 15 + years relative to the general stock market and relative to its industry.

2)   The enterprise achieved these results in a particularly turbulent environment, full of events that were uncontrollable, fast-moving, uncertain, and potentially harmful.

3)   The enterprise began its rise to greatness from a position of vulnerability, being young and/ or small at the start of its 10X journey.

The crucial question is “What did the great companies share in common that distinguished them from their direct comparisons?”

Leaders…. Entrenched myth: Successful leaders in a turbulent world are bold, risk-seeking visionaries. Contrary finding: The best leaders we studied did not have a visionary ability to predict the future. They observed what worked, figured out why it worked, and built upon proven foundations.

They were not:

·     more risk taking,

·     bolder,

·     more visionary, and

·     more creative than the comparisons.

They were:

·     more disciplined,

·     more empirical, and

·     more paranoid.

Innovation…. “Entrenched myth: Innovation distinguishes 10X companies in a fast-moving, uncertain, and chaotic world. Contrary finding: To our surprise, no. Yes, the 10X cases innovated, a lot. But the evidence does not support the premise that 10X companies will necessarily be more innovative than their less successful comparisons; and in some surprise cases, the 10X cases were less innovative. Innovation by itself turns out not to be the trump card we expected; more important is the ability to scale innovation, to blend creativity with discipline.”

Speed….. “Entrenched myth: A threat-filled world favors the speedy; you’re either the quick or the dead. Contrary finding: The idea that leading in a “fast world” always requires “fast decisions” and “fast action”—and that we should embrace an overall ethos of “Fast! Fast! Fast!”—is a good way to get killed. 10X leaders figure out when to go fast, and when not to.”

Change…. “Entrenched myth: Radical change on the outside requires radical change on the inside. Contrary finding: The 10X cases changed less in reaction to their changing world than the comparison cases. Just because your environment is rocked by dramatic change does not mean that you should inflict radical change upon yourself.”

Luck…. “Entrenched myth: Great enterprises with 10X success have a lot better luck.  Contrary finding: The 10X companies did not generally have more luck than the comparisons. Both sets had luck—lots of luck, both good and bad—in comparable amounts. The critical question is not whether you’ll have luck, but what you do with the luck that you get.”

Peter Drucker taught, “the best—perhaps even the only—way to predict the future is to create it.

2 10XERS

“Victory awaits him who has everything in order—luck people call it. Defeat is certain for him who has neglected to take the necessary precautions in time; this is called bad luck.” —Roald Amundsen, The South Pole

“Amundsen’s philosophy: You prepare with intensity, all the time, so that when conditions turn against you, you can draw from a deep reservoir of strength. And equally, you prepare so that when conditions turn in your favor, you can strike hard.”

“Unlike Scott, Amundsen systematically built enormous buffers for unforeseen events.”

“A single detail aptly highlights the difference in their approaches: Scott brought one thermometer for a key altitude-measurement device, and he exploded in “an outburst of wrath and consequence” when it broke; Amundsen brought four such thermometers to cover for accidents.”

DIFFERENT BEHAVIORS, NOT DIFFERENT CIRCUMSTANCES

“We’re not saying that 10Xers lacked creative intensity, ferocious ambition, or the courage to bet big. They displayed all these traits, but so did their less successful comparisons. So then, how did the 10Xers distinguish themselves?

1)   Control: First, 10Xers embrace a paradox of control and non-control. On the one hand, 10Xers understand that they face continuous uncertainty and that they cannot control, and cannot accurately predict, significant aspects of the world around them.

2)   Fate: On the other hand, 10Xers reject the idea that forces outside their control or chance events will determine their results; they accept full responsibility for their own fate.

10Xers then bring this idea to life by a triad of core behaviours:

·     Fanatic discipline,

·     Empirical creativity, and

·     Productive paranoia.

FANATIC DISCIPLINE

“Both Kelleher and Lewis, like all the 10Xers we studied, were nonconformists in the best sense. They started with values, purpose, long-term goals, and severe performance standards; and they had the fanatic discipline to adhere to them.”

(if you’re a hammer, everything you see looks like a nail).

EMPIRICAL CREATIVITY

Like scientists….. “CEOs of the 10Xers were like scientists. Working based on the data and evidence.”

“Social psychology research indicates that at times of uncertainty, most people look to other people—authority figures, peers, group norms—for their primary cues about how to proceed.

10Xers, in contrast, do not look to conventional wisdom to set their course during times of uncertainty, nor do they primarily look to what other people do, or to what pundits and experts say they should do. They look primarily to empirical evidence.”

“But the 10Xers had a much deeper empirical foundation for their decisions and actions, which gave them well-founded confidence and bounded their risk. The 10Xers don’t favor analysis over action; they favor empiricism as the foundation for decisive action.”

PRODUCTIVE PARANOIA

“Like Amundsen with his huge supply buffers, 10Xers maintain a conservative financial position, squirreling away cash to protect against unforeseen disruptions.”

“In short, we found no consistent pattern in the backgrounds of 10Xers relative to the comparison leaders.”

3 20 MILE MARCH

“The 20 Mile March is more than a philosophy. It’s about having concrete, clear, intelligent, and rigorously pursued performance mechanisms that keep you on track.”

“The 20 Mile March creates two types of self-imposed discomfort:

(1) the discomfort of unwavering commitment to high performance in difficult conditions, and

(2) the discomfort of holding back in good conditions.”

Important…. “We found that every 10X company exemplified the 20 Mile March principle during the era we studied.”

WHY 20 MILE MARCHERS WIN?

“20 Mile Marching helps turn the odds in your favor for three reasons:

1. Confidence: It builds confidence in your ability to perform well in adverse circumstances.

2. Prevent: It reduces the likelihood of catastrophe when you’re hit by turbulent disruption.

3. Self-control: It helps you exert self-control in an out-of-control environment.”

“Having a clear 20 Mile March focuses the mind; because everyone on the team knows the markers and their importance, they can stay on track.”

ARTHUR LEVINSON: TEACHING A COMPANY TO MARCH

A good 20 Mile March has the following seven characteristics:

1. Clear performance markers.

2. Self-imposed constraints.

3. Appropriate to the specific enterprise.

4. Largely within the company’s control to achieve.

5. A proper timeframe—long enough to manage, yet short enough to have teeth.

6. Imposed by the company upon itself.

7. Achieved with high consistency.

“Key question? What is your 20 Mile March, something that you commit to achieving for 15 to 30 year?”

4 FIRE BULLETS, THEN CANNONBALLS

A BIG SURPRISE

About innovation…. “The evidence from our research does not support the premise that 10X companies will necessarily be more innovative than their less successful comparisons. And in some surprise cases, such as Southwest Airlines versus PSA and Amgen versus Genentech, the 10X companies were less innovative than the comparisons.”

About pioneering…. “Tellis and Golder also found that 64 percent of pioneers failed outright.

Good for society, bad for pioneers…. “It seems that pioneering innovation is good for society but statistically lethal for the individual pioneer!”

The level of innovation…. “We’re not saying that innovation is unimportant. Every company in this study innovated. It’s just that the 10X winners innovated less than we would have expected relative to their industries and relative to their comparison cases; they were innovative enough to be successful but generally not the most innovative.”

CREATIVITY AND DISCIPLINE

“Of course, it is not discipline alone that makes greatness, but the combination of discipline and creativity.”

“Fire bullets, then fire cannonballs. First, you fire bullets to figure out what’ll work. Then once you have empirical confidence based on the bullets, you concentrate your resources and fire a cannonball. After the cannonball hits, you keep 20 Mile Marching to make the most of your big success.”

<= Just like in the “Lean Startup Way”

Bullets… “Acquisitions would be made with little or no debt, and only when the balance sheet would remain strong after the purchase, thereby ensuring that acquisitions would remain low risk, low cost, and relatively low distraction.”

Calibrated cannonballs… “The 10Xers were much more likely to fire calibrated cannonballs, while the comparison cases had uncalibrated cannonballs flying all over the place.”

“And that’s the underlying principle: empirical validation. Be creative, but validate your creative ideas with empirical experience. You don’t even need to be the one to fire all the bullets; you can learn from the empirical experience of others.”

EMPIRICAL VALIDATION, NOT PREDICTIVE GENIUS

APPLE’S REBIRTH: BULLETS, CANNONBALLS, AND DISCIPLINED CREATIVITY

KEY POINTS ► A “fire bullets, then cannonballs” approach better explains the success of 10X companies than big-leap innovations and predictive genius.

5 LEADING ABOVE THE DEATH LINE

“As soon as there is life there is danger.” —Ralph Waldo Emerson

“In this chapter, we explore three core sets of practices, rooted in the research, for leading and building a great enterprise with productive paranoia: ► Productive Paranoia 1: Build cash reserves and buffers—oxygen canisters—to prepare for unexpected events and bad luck before they happen. ► Productive Paranoia 2: Bound risk—Death Line risk, asymmetric risk, and uncontrollable risk—and manage time-based risk. ► Productive Paranoia 3: Zoom out, then zoom in, remaining hypervigilant to sense changing conditions and respond effectively.”

PRODUCTIVE PARANOIA 1: EXTRA OXYGEN CANISTERS-IT’S WHAT YOU DO BEFORE THE STORM COMES

“A Black Swan is a low-probability disruption, an event that almost no one can foresee, a concept popularized by the writer and financier Nassim Nicholas Taleb. Almost no one can predict a particular Black Swan before it hits, not even our 10Xers. But it is possible to predict that there will be some Black Swan, as yet unspecified.”

“When a calamitous event clobbers an industry or the overall economy, companies fall into one of three categories: those that pull ahead, those that fall behind, and those that die. The disruption itself does not determine your category. You do.”

PRODUCTIVE PARANOIA 2: BOUNDING RISK

“To explore this question, we first identified three primary categories of risk relevant to leading an enterprise: (1) Death Line risk, (2) asymmetric risk, and (3) uncontrollable risk. (See Research Foundations: Risk-Category Analysis.)”

“In short, we found that the 10X companies took less risk than the comparison cases. Certainly, the 10X leaders took risks, but relative to the comparisons in the same environments, they bounded, managed, and avoided risks. The 10X leaders abhorred Death Line risk, shunned asymmetric risk, and steered away from uncontrollable risk.”

PRODUCTIVE PARANOIA 3: ZOOM OUT, THEN ZOOM IN

Zoom Out…. “Sense a change in conditions Assess the time frame: How much time before the risk profile changes? Assess with rigor: Do the new conditions call for disrupting plans? If so, how?”

Zoom In…. “Focus on supreme execution of plans and objectives”

LEADING ABOVE THE DEATH LINE KEY POINTS ► This chapter explores three key dimensions of productive paranoia: 1. Build cash reserves and buffers—oxygen canisters—to prepare for unexpected events and bad luck before they happen. 2. Bound risk—Death Line risk, asymmetric risk, and uncontrollable risk—and manage time-based risk. 3. Zoom out, then zoom in, remaining hypervigilant to sense changing conditions and respond effectively.

6 SMaC

“Most men die of their remedies, and not of their illnesses.” —Molière

The “SMaC” is a formula and the word stands for

–      Specific,

–      Methodical, and

–      Consistent.”

“You can use the term “SMaC” as a descriptor in any number of ways: as an adjective (“ Let’s build a SMaC system”), as a noun (“ SMaC lowers risk”), and as a verb (“ Let’s SMaC this project”).”

“A SMaC recipe is a set of durable operating practices that create a replicable and consistent success formula; it is clear and concrete, enabling the entire enterprise to unify and organize its efforts, giving clear guidance regarding what to do and what not to do. A SMaC recipe reflects empirical validation and insight about what actually works and why. Howard Putnam’s 10 points at Southwest Airlines perfectly illustrates the idea.”

7 RETURN ON LUCK

“The real difference between the 10X and comparison cases wasn’t luck per se but what they did with the luck they got. Adding up all the evidence, we found that the 10X cases were not generally luckier than the comparison cases. The 10X cases and the comparisons both got luck, good and bad, in comparable amounts. The evidence leads us to conclude that luck does not cause 10X success. People do. The critical question is not “Are you lucky?” but “Do you get a high return on luck?”

This is just like straight from Malcolm Gladwell’s “Outliers” …. “His friend Paul Allen just happened to see a cover story in the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics titled “World’s First Microcomputer Kit to Rival Commercial Models.”

Important about the luck…. “Gates did more with his luck, taking a confluence of lucky circumstances and creating a huge return on his luck. And this is the important difference.”

Return on Luck (ROL)….. “Everyone gets luck, good and bad, but 10X winners make more of the luck they get. The Bill Gates story illustrates the upper-right quadrant, getting a great return on good luck.”

10XERS SHINE: GREAT RETURN ON BAD LUCK

“Canadian NHL players with the “bad luck” of being born in the second half of the year have a higher likelihood of making it into the Hall of Fame than those with the “good luck” of being born in the first half of the year!”

About bad luck…. “Nietzsche famously wrote, “What does not kill me, makes me stronger.” We all get bad luck. The question is how to use that bad luck to make us stronger, to turn it into “one of the best things that ever happened,” to not let it become a psychological prison. And that’s precisely what 10Xers do.”

BAD LUCK, POOR RETURN: THE ONE PLACE YOU REALLY DON’T WANT TO BE

LUCK IS NOT A STRATEGY…. “Life offers no guarantees. But it does offer strategies for managing the odds, indeed, even managing luck. The essence of “managing luck” involves four things: (1) cultivating the ability to zoom out to recognize luck when it happens, (2) developing the wisdom to see when, and when not, to let luck disrupt your plans, (3) being sufficiently well-prepared to endure an inevitable spate of bad luck, and (4) creating a positive return on luck—both good luck and bad—when it comes. Luck is not a strategy, but getting a positive return on luck is.”

“The best leaders we’ve studied maintain a paradoxical relationship to luck. On the one hand, they credit good luck in retrospect for having played a role in their achievements, despite the undeniable fact that others were just as lucky. On the other hand, they don’t blame bad luck for failures, and they hold only themselves responsible if they fail to turn their luck into great results. 10Xers grasp that if they blame bad luck for failure, they capitulate to fate. Equally, they grasp that if they fail to perceive when good luck helped, they might overestimate their own skill and leave themselves exposed when good luck runs dry. There might be more good luck down the road, but 10Xers never count on it.”

EPILOGUE GREAT BY CHOICE

Disease…. “We sense a dangerous disease infecting our modern culture and eroding hope: an increasingly prevalent view that greatness owes more to circumstance, even luck, than to action and discipline—that what happens to us matters more than what we do.”

Responsibility…. “Do we want to build a society and culture that encourage us to believe that we aren’t responsible for our choices and accountable for our performance? Our research evidence stands firmly against this view.”

People….“The factors that determine whether or not a company becomes truly great, even in a chaotic and uncertain world, lie largely within the hands of its people.”

Moment of truth…. “When the moment comes—when we’re afraid, exhausted, or tempted—what choice do we make? Do we abandon our values? Do we give in? Do we accept average performance because that’s what most everyone else accepts?”

Deep within…. “The greatest leaders we’ve studied throughout all our research cared as much about values as victory, as much about purpose as profit, as much about being useful as being successful. Their drive and standards are ultimately internal, rising from somewhere deep inside.

How should we change according to the book?

Start the 20 Mile March:

1. Clear performance markers (tavoitteet).

2. Self-imposed constraints.

3. Appropriate to the specific enterprise.

4. Largely within the company’s control to achieve (saavutettavissa).

5. A proper timeframe—long enough to manage, yet short enough to have teeth (aikaikkuna).

6. Imposed by the company upon itself.

7. Achieved with high consistency (osumatarkkuus).

What should I personally do?

“Companies, leaders, organizations, and societies do not thrive on chaos. But they can thrive in chaos.”

Summary

The book in six words – ”When the going gets weird, the weird become CEO.” (Hunter S. Thompson quote with a slight twist)

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Eliyahu M. Goldratt: The Goal

About the book

If you want to try a business novel – this is the book. The Goal is a great business novel. It is also a shotgun book where the story is so fascinating that you might want to read it in a fast forward mode. The actual book is so heavy that you might want to consider to read it as a e-book or as audiobooks.

How was the book?

The Goal will be inspiring you to think numerous topics such as change management, people management, work-life balance, how to use consults etc. As the title tells us – this book is all about processes. And how to keep continuously improving processes. One special topic is brought up in the end and it’s how to position sales and marketing in a company. There is also a human interest story about a marriage and it makes this business book somewhat different.

The Goal will teach you how to understand processes. The case example in the book is a factory, but the thinking and the methodology of the book can be applied into great many other disciplines than manufacturing industry. 

What are the key learnings of the book? 

Goldratt is teaching us three different concepts. By managing those concepts on can manage ones processes. Key concepts and the definitions of the concepts are:

–      Throughput (incoming money) “is the rate at which the system generates money through sales”.

–      Inventory (money stuck inside) is all the money that the system has invested in purchasing things it intends to sell”.

–      Operational expense (money going out) “is all the money the system spends in order to turn inventory into throughput”.

And what is the plot of the book? The plot is that the people in the factory are searching for a goal. They are forced into the change management situation via an executive decision. With the help of one consultant they come up with the idea that what is the goal. Their “goal is to reduce operational expense and reduce inventory while simultaneously increasing throughput”.   

The operational expense, inventory and throughput are main characters in the business novel. Bottleneck, flow and batch sizes are doing sidekicks. To identify a bottleneck one has to be very familiar with the process and especially with the metrics.

The bottleneck showcases an important learning to the organisation, because “an hour lost at a bottleneck is an hour lost for the entire system”. Flow is a desired state, because it will “balance the flow of product through the factory with the demand from the market”. That way you get process flow into daily operational mode. “Batch sizes” is important in order to understand that with what one can achieve the best performance. 

Goldratt offers five focusing steps to utilize the process of on-going improvement:

–      IDENTIFY the system’s constraint.

–      Decide how to EXPLOIT the system’s constraints.

–      SUBORDINATE everything else to the above decisions.

–      ELEVATE the system’s constraint.

–      If in the previous steps a constraint has been broken – go back to step 1, but do not allow inertia to cause a system constraint.    

The key learning would be common sense, because typically problems are solved with common sense. Not with great theories nor with IT-systems that have too many dimensions. Consultants can bring insight into the problems by asking the right questions. The Goal endorses that the business owners should find answers with their common sense.  

What should I personally do? 

Re-evaluate the operational expense, inventory and throughput in my operations.

Summary

The book in six words: “Common sense is not common at all (Mark Twain).”