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Lean thinking, why do many warehouses fail with the implementation of lean?

<p>I am surprised not more warehouses implements lean in their organizations&period; It has been proven many times how effective it is&period; If you not are familiar but want to know more about lean&comma; I recommend you to read&comma; ”Lean Thinking&colon; Banish Waste and Create Wealth in Your Corporation” James P&period; Womack and Daniel T&period; Jones&period; It is one of the first books about lean and describes the positive effects&period; First edition came out in 1996&comma; but is available in revised and updated edition&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When I have been out and visit other companies and industry colleagues I often hear that they have tried to implement lean but it failed after some time&period; They have done some quick progress&comma; but after a while&comma; it has stagnated and the lean way of thinking disappears while everything returns to old established routines like batch and queue methods&period; This is a big problem and gives lean a bad reputation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>What is it that goes wrong&quest; Often it is a leader on the mid-level with an interest that has been on a lecture about lean or perhaps a day&&num;8217&semi;s training&period; The leader have renewed energy and starts to train the staff in the department&period; In the end&comma; the whole department have renewed energy and they start to use the newly acquired knowledge&period; They start to get rid of waste &lpar;muda&rpar;&period; Changing its operations in order to get a continuous flow&comma; maybe also implements 5S&period; Then it begins to get difficult to make progress&comma; you discover that you are dependent on other departments&comma; before and after your own department in the flow of goods&period; Often you get a temporary positive effect in these cases but because you are stuck and become dependent on other departments&comma; you lose energy and your lean implementation running out of steam&period; You also need inspiration to refill energy such as lectures or visits to colleagues in the industry&period; Often senior management do not understand this and rejects the budget for such activities&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I have great respect for the leaders that I describe above who takes initiative&comma; gain insight into lean and understand the potential of the philosophy&period; The problem is that senior management and the board of directors is not on the lean train&period; In most companies&comma; it is watertight compartments between departments such as purchase&comma; warehouse and production or sales&period; Every manager looks after his or her department&period; Their salaries and bonuses are based on what their department performs&comma; not the company as a whole&period; I have visited companies where three departments&comma; for example&comma; purchasing&comma; warehouse and production worked with lean independently&period; It is completely wrong&period; There is a great risk that three departments sub-optimize without regard to the company as a whole&period; If you implement lean these watertight compartments have to disappear&period; Only senior management can do that&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It does not have to be wrong that only one department implements lean&comma; but you need to be aware of the limitations&period; It can be a good way to convince senior management of the benefits of lean to start with one department&period; You get so much greater effect if you implement lean throughout the whole value chain&comma; read &&num;8220&semi;Lean Thinking&&num;8221&semi; and you will understand what I mean&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The big question is how to get senior management and boards of directors to understand this&quest; Certainly&comma; it is odd that companies often are willing to invest hundreds of millions in complex automation technologies with little or no flexibility&comma; everything based on questionable ROI calculations rather than begin with an investment in lean that cost a fraction to implement&period; So many companies have demonstrated the incredible effects lean have&period; It is difficult to calculate the exact savings in a lean implementation&comma; but if you look at case studies&comma; you hardly need to be worried that it is a bad investment&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Senior management and boards of directors need to be more curious and inclined to develop their knowledge in new areas such as lean&period; I can experience a rigidity and an excessive caution&comma; the higher up you go in the hierarchy of many companies&period; It inhibits the development&period; They trust blindly in new technology&period; It is little understanding and knowledge about soft values like leadership and lean&period; Personally&comma; I think that it is enough to look at Toyota and Scania to understand how successful lean is&period; If you start looking&comma; you find many more success stories in lean&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>What you should remember if you implement lean is that it is crucial what kind of leadership you have in the organization&period; Lean works best in relatively flat organizations with an unpretentious and responsive leadership&period; I think this is where many organizations fail when they implement lean&period; Organizations with leaders who have poor self-esteem who feel unsecure in the process of change and react in an aggressive manner that directly inhibits development unfortunately&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I am confident that lean is the best alternative and the only option for many companies&&num;8217&semi; future&period; Particularly in the Western world who compete on other terms of higher labor costs and facility costs etc&period; How fast implementations rate will be in companies depends on how open to change they will be in the future&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I recommend everyone to learn more about lean&period; Lean is not a passing trend&semi; it is here to stay&period; It is possible to implement in all types of businesses&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The winners are those who dare to jump on the train and become a lean and mean machine&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Roberth Karlsson<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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