brain v.24.3 copy.pdf

70
This document and its contents are Copyright © 2013 by Mike Rother, all rights reserved 1217 Baldwin Avenue / Ann Arbor, MI 48104 USA / tel: (734) 665-5411 / [email protected] Improvement Kata Mindset Get better at achieving goals and meeting challenges by teaching the creative process by Mike Rother 2013 24.2 Next Target Condition Target Condition Current Condition Illustration by Dr. Lutz Engel

Upload: prahase-catalin

Post on 29-Sep-2015

31 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 1 This document and its contents are Copyright 2013 by Mike Rother, all rights reserved

    1217 Baldwin Avenue / Ann Arbor, MI 48104 USA / tel: (734) 665-5411 / [email protected]

    Improvement Kata MindsetGet better at achieving goals and meeting

    challenges by teaching the creative process

    by Mike Rother2013

    24.2NextTarget ConditionTarget

    Condition

    CurrentCondition

    Illustration by Dr. Lutz Engel

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 2

    I want to propose that this is something middle managers should spend more time on

    WHAT ID LIKE TO FOCUS ON TODAY

    Lean solutions (tools, techniques and principles) to improve quality, cost, delivery

    A systematic, scientific routine of thinking & acting

    Middle managers asteachers of that routine

    Visible

    LessVisible

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 3

    Learner(Mentee)

    Responsible for the process

    Coach(Mentor)

    Supervisoror manager

    Process

    Applies the Improvement Kata

    Teachesthe IK

    BEFORE WE GET STARTED - Quick Overview

    The Improvement Kata models the scientific creative process and makes it operationalizable and teachable in any organization

    The Coaching Kata is a routine for teaching the

    Improvement Kata. It relies heavily on the Five Questions (Coach) and the PDCA Cycles

    Record (Learner)

    The Improvement Kata + the Coaching Kata are a management system. Its not a problem solving approach to be implemented, but a process of scientific-skill development and mindset change.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 4

    A FAMILIAR ILLUSION

    Part 1 The Power of Habits

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 5

    HERES ANOTHER FAMILIAR ILLUSION

    We may know how a kanban system works

    But we dont know what will make your kanban system work

    VisibleAspect

    LessVisibleAspect

    Once we assume we know, we stop experimenting!Which of these aspects is the Lean community teaching?What mindset is the Lean community creating?

    Important and necessary, but...

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 6

    WE LIKE TO BE CERTAIN IN OUR VIEWThats the way our brain is wired

    Declarations of high confidence mainly tell you that an individual has constructed a coherent story in his mind, not necessarily that the story is true.

    ~ Daniel KahnemanThinking Fast and Slow

    But once we think we know, we set a course and go, rather than testing, learning and adapting. Thats where trouble begins.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 7

    WHAT IS METACOGNITION?

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 8

    METACOGNITION =Thinking about how you think

    i.e., analyzing your own cognitive processes

    Unlike most animals,humans have the abilityto be aware of their thinking and can influence it.

    Lets try it!

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 9

    A QUICK EXPERIMENTTake a moment... please cross your arms.

    Then re-cross them the other way.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 10

    QUICK EXPERIMENTPlease clasp your hands.

    Then clasp them the other way.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 11

    In each case, how did it feel the second time compared to the first?

    For most of us the other way feels odd.You have to consciously think about it and be more deliberate.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 12

    UnconsciousThinking

    DeliberateThinking

    Habits are behaviors that have been repeated regularly and occur unconsciously. The repeated behavior develops neural pathways in the brain, making the behavior easier to complete. Why do this? The brain weighs only 3 pounds but uses 20% of the bodys energy!Unconscious thinking enables you to get through the day by taking care of routine decisions with minimum fuss. Unconscious thinking is fast and instinctive, while deliberate thinking is slow and intentional.

    OUR UNCONSCIOUS HABITS ARE FAST & POWERFULOur brain creates habits for efficiency; to free up capacity

    for when deliberate decision making is necessary

    The subconscious is powerful because it can processbillions of bits of information per second, while ourdeliberate mind can only process a few thousand per second.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 13

    Much of what happens in an organization is a consequence of the habits that people in the organization have learned through practice, whether deliberately or by happenstance.

    MUCH OF WHAT WE DO IS HABITUALLike crossing our arms, performed almost without thinking

    However, a pitfall of many habits is that the past experiences that created them do not necessarily represent future situations

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 14

    What would happen if you practicedfolding your arms the other way every day?

    It would become normal; something you can do without thinking about it.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 15

    UnconsciousThinking

    DeliberatePractice

    develops

    We may think that all skill is innate -- that you are either born with it or not -- but thats not 100% correct.You can rewire your thinking and habits by deliberately (consciously) practicing a targeted behavior pattern.Once the pattern youre practicing enters your unconscious it gets smoother and faster and becomes the normal, habitual way you operate.

    SO... WE CAN CHANGE OUR AUTOPILOTHumans have the ability to deliberately develop new habits!

    Thats what the Improvement Kata & Coaching Kata are about.

    You can change the culture of an organization,and even an entire society, this way.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 16

    Through practicing, the pattern of a katabecomes second nature - done with littleconscious attention - and readily available.Examples include riding a bicycle, driving acar, typing. Once youve learned to drive you dont think much about using the cars controls and can focus your attention on the situational aspects of navigating the road.

    WHAT IS A KATA?A kata is a routine you practice deliberately so its pattern becomes a habit

    Part 2 The Improvement Kata

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 17

    YOUR ORGANIZATIONS CULTURE PERPETUATES ITSELF EVERY DAY

    Team or Organizational

    CultureRoutines

    HabitsRitualsNorms

    Mindsetand

    behavior

    Teaches

    This is automatic,unconscious

    daily practicing

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 18

    KATA CREATES NEW CULTURE

    Team or Organizational

    CultureRoutines

    HabitsRitualsNorms

    Mindsetand

    behavior

    Teaches

    This is automatic,unconscious

    daily practicing

    Practicingspecific

    newbehaviors

    Affects

    This is deliberate,conscious

    daily practicing

    KATAIs Used

    Here

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 19

    HERES THE COOL THINGWe now have kata -- a repeatable routine -- for teaching

    and coaching this part

    Lean solutions (tools, techniques and principles) to improve quality, cost, delivery

    A systematic, scientific routine of thinking & acting

    Managers as teachersof that routine

    Visible

    LessVisible

    IK

    CK

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 20

    A DEFINITION OF MANAGEMENT

    The systematic pursuit of desired conditionsby utilizing human capabilities

    in a concerted way

    We want to be here

    nextWe are

    here

    Currentcondition

    Desired condition

    TargetconditionChallenge

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 21

    LEADERS & MANAGERS ARE TEACHERS, ANDTHEIR ACTIONS DETERMINE COMPANY CAPABILITY

    Whether consciously or not, with their everyday words and actions all leaders and managers are teaching their people a mindset and approach.

    So it makes sense to ask: What patterns of behavior and thought do we want our managers to be teaching in our organization?

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 22

    Here the manager automaticallyteaches the prevailing culture

    Here the manageris a coach who deliberately teachesa new way

    DELIBERATE versus AUTOMATIC TEACHING

    Mindsetand

    behavior

    TeachesAffectsPracticingspecific

    newbehaviors

    Team or Organizational

    CultureRoutines

    HabitsRitualsNorms

    KATAIs Used

    Here

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 23

    Practice Pattern 1: THE IMPROVEMENT KATAThis is the fundamental pattern.

    The Improvement Kata is about striving toward a goalin a systematic, scientific way.

    Practicing the Improvement Kata develops mastery of improvement, adaptiveness and innovation

    Establish the Next Target Condition

    TargetCondition

    PDCA Toward the Target Condition

    The 5 Questions

    GoandSee

    PLAN

    CHECK DO

    ACT

    C C

    T C

    Grasp the Current

    ConditionUnderstand

    theDirection

    321 4Where do you want to go?

    Then iterateto get there

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 24

    1 In consideration of a vision and challenge...2 Grasp the current condition.3 Define the next target condition.4 Move toward that target condition with PDCA, which

    uncovers obstacles that need to be worked on.

    Visionand

    ChallengeCurrent

    Condition TargetCondition

    NextObstacles

    ANOTHER WAY TO LOOK ATTHE IMPROVEMENT KATA

    2 3 14

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 25

    Practice Pattern 2: THE COACHING KATAThis is a pattern for teaching the Improvement Kata

    The Coaching Kata is a set of coaching routines to practice in order to develop effective coaching habits. It's a coaching pattern to help you teach the Improvement Kata thinking pattern.The Coaching Kata gives managers and supervisors a standardized approach to facilitate Improvement Kata skill development in daily work.

    The manager / coach needs to know boththe Improvement Kata and the Coaching Kata!

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 26

    LearnersStoryboard

    Process

    Learner(Mentee)

    Team

    Manager(Coach or Mentor)

    CoachingKata

    ImprovementKata

    THE TWO PRIMARY ROLESIN PRACTICING & TEACHING

    The coachs focus is giving procedural guidance to develop learners Improvement Kata skill

    The learners focus is applying the Improvement Kata to an objective

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 27

    DEVELOPING A META HABIT THROUGH PRACTICEWHAT youre working on: The focus process provides the content.

    HOW youre working: The Improvement Kata provides the form.

    . . ... .. . . .

    . ..CurrentCondition

    TargetCondition

    Unclear Territory

    Obstacles

    Coaching Cycles

    with the 5 Questions

    5Q 5Q 5Q 5Q 5Q5Q5Q 5Q 5Q 5Q5Q 5Q 5Q

    The pattern of thinking and acting (the kata) stays the same and repeats.This is the habit, the HOW, the Coach is teaching.Coach

    Learner

    The content and obstacles the Learner works on are situational and will vary.

    The Coach is teaching the Learner a scientific way of thinking by using the same pattern of enquiry every coaching cycle

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 28

    THE COACHS TASK: FOCUS ON THE HOWThe task is to determine whether or not the learner is practicing within the corridor of thinking and acting specified by the Improvement Kata, and to introduce procedural course corrections as necessary.When the learner gets outside the Improvement Kata corridor the potential for learning (for increasing the learners IK skill) is great. In this case you can either provide a procedural input now, or allow a small failure to occur and then provide the input.

    Or here?

    Is the learner

    practicinghere?

    Corridor ofImprovement Kata

    way of thinking & acting

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 29

    CORRECT PRACTICE MAKES PERFECTThe learner will naturally default back to his or her existing ways of thinking and acting.The coach introduces corrections to ensure that the learner practices the right pattern the right way.

    Or here?

    Photos from The Karate Kid, 1984

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 30

    THE INTENTION IS NOTAUDIT AND COMPLIANCE

    Its this... ...not this

    Teaching the learner how to playthe sytematic and scientific

    continuous improvement game

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 31

    SEE - Try to understand how the learner is thinking(Coach is in an observing / questioning mode)COMPARE - Compare this to the desired pattern -- the corridor -- specified by the Improvement Kata(Coach is in a judging mode)INSTRUCT - Introduce a course adjustment if necessary(Coach is in an instructing or guiding mode)

    12

    3

    ITS A SEE-COMPARE-INSTRUCTPATTERN OF TEACHING

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 32

    FIVE KEY POINTS SO FAR1. We operate on habits.

    2. We can change our habits through deliberate practice.

    3. There is a pattern we can practice to get better at meeting challenging goals. We call it the Improvement Kata, which has four steps.

    4. The Improvement Kata is a way of managing ourselves.

    5. Middle managers are the coaches / teachers for that pattern.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 33

    ...copied at a U.S. companyA solution at Toyota...

    HOW HAVE WE BEEN MANAGING?Leaders and managers have tended to focus on outcomes and solutions

    Focusing on outcomes is a kind of implementation orientation, which assumes the path to the desired condition is relatively clear. With that thinking, managements task is:

    Establish targets Maybe describe some solutions or tools Provide incentives to get it done Periodically check for results

    Management by Results

    Part 3 A Different Way of Managing

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 34

    Incentive: Group B is told they will receive a cash bonus if they solve the problem faster than the average of persons in Group A.

    BUT HOW WELLDOES FOCUSING ON OUTCOMES WORK?

    The Candle ProblemFind a way to attach the candle to the wall so wax will not drip on the floor

    Solution

    Experiments by psychologists Kark Dunker and Sam Glucksberg

    Box of tacks

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 35

    Result? The members of Group B (the group with the incentive) take three and a half minutes longer on average to solve the problem.

    THE SOLUTION AND THE RESULT

    Find a way to attach the candle to the wall so wax will not drip on the floor

    SolutionProblem as presented

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 36

    ROUND TWO

    Result? When the candle problem is presented this simpler way, the members of Group B (the group with the incentive) do complete the task faster than the average in Group A.

    Now four separate items

    Find a way to attach the candle to the wall so wax will not drip on the floor

    Problem as presented Solution

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 37

    Solution difficult to seeSolution easy to see

    Behavioral scientists have shown repeatedly that extrinsic motivators work for tasks where the path is clear, but not for challenging problems that require creativity and adaptiveness (ingenuity) to solve.

    FOCUSING ON OUTCOMES WORKSWHEN THE PATH IS CLEAR

    Challenges where the path is unclearare increasingly common

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 38

    We need tomake plans...

    KEY POINTThe implementation-oriented management approach

    is not well suited to meeting challenges

    TargetCondition

    Predictable Zone

    Plan & ROI calculationsare made hereOperating based on what we see and think today

    Learning Zone

    ...but we cant know in advance what all the steps will be that will get us to a challenging target condition.

    When you take steps forward you discover things that were not apparent back when we were calculating and planning

    CurrentKnowledgeThreshold

    Obstacles

    Unclear

    Territory

    ? ?

    ?We want to

    be here next

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 39

    EXAMPLE OF IMPLEMENTATION ORIENTATIONAction-Item Lists

    Such lists and plans= deciding in advancehow we will get there.Yet the situation changesas we move forward!So we are not experimenting and learning.

    This is not an effective way of tapping our ingenuity!

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 40

    Management by Means

    A DIFFERENT WAY OF MANAGINGThere may be only 3 things we canand need to know with certainty!

    (1) Where we are(2) Where we want to be next(3) By what means we should navigate the unclear

    territory between here and there. The manager focuses on development of skill / behavior patterns.

    We want to behere

    We are here

    Unclear Territory

    This is a grey zone!

    planis

    Obstacles

    madehere

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 41

    THE IK & CK ARE ABOUT TAPPING, MOBILIZING& CHANNELING INGENUITY IN AN ORGANIZATION

    Ingenuity= Creating a way of doing something that we want but cannot yet do.

    The challenge can be anything, big or small: An assembly operator and team leader want to

    find a way to drive screws without cross-threading We want to operate an assembly cell with four

    instead of six operators (at the same output) We want to injection mold parts in lot sizes that

    are 50% smaller We want to develop an electric car that goes

    250 miles on a single charge

    The approach is the same in each case.The feelings of mastery that come from overcoming obstacles are also the same.This means everyone in an organization can participate, which is critical for innovation.

    KEYPOINT!

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 42

    MORE KEY POINTS

    1. The path forward cant be 100% predicted.

    2. We tend to manage by pre-defining the path to a goal.

    3. Navigating the grey zone takes a different way of managing.

    4. With the IK and CK the manager focuses on how a team is working.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 43

    ProcessesProductsServices

    PeoplesMINDSET

    BUSINESS OUTCOMES

    PeoplesBEHAVIOR PATTERNSor skill

    WHERE DO AN ORGANIZATIONSSOLUTIONS COME FROM?

    Part 4 The Role of Mindset

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 44

    WHAT IS MINDSET?

    MindsetA subconscious, habitual way of thinking and feeling, learned via successes and failuresA lens through whichwe view the world

    Determines how we interpret and respond to situations

    Two Points: Mindset is the basis of organizational culture

    If you want to change your organizationsculture youll have to change mindsets

    BehaviorPatterns

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 45

    LETS LOOK AT TWO MINDSETS

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 46

    Mindset 1: A FIXED MINDSET *We derive a lot of our sense of security and confidence from certainty, and tend to seek it.The way the adult brain functions, we naturally strive to operate in what I call a Zone of Apparent Certainty, where things are as expected, rational, calculable, logical, familiar, risk free & certain.With this mindset: We expect that things will go as planned

    We feel we have control and can predict

    Comfortarea

    ApparentCertainty

    Mystery

    UncertaintyInside your current knowledge threshold

    *Terminology by Carol Dweck, Mindset (Random House, 2006)

    And many things should be as certain as possible!Like the beam holding up the roof, or serving the customer.

    ImplementationLike the candle problem with the tacks outside the box

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 47

    WE NATURALLY AND AUTOMATICALLY DO IT, BUT TRYING TO MAKE EVERYTHING

    CERTAIN IS DANGEROUS

    Here are three reasons...

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 48

    Cant see allthe way there

    #1: WHAT IS AHEAD OF USSIMPLY ISNT CERTAIN

    We can see only part way down the path to any challenging goal

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 49

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 50

    fMRI Scans of brain activity by Dr. Gerald HtherPresented at Production Systems 2009 Conference, Munich, May 2009

    #2: THE SPECIAL CAPABILITIES OF OUR BRAINGET ENGAGED WHEN WE DONT KNOW

    Our human capability to learn is often latent; it has to be activated

    This brain is actively engaged in wiring new circuits (which uses more energy)

    fMRI brain scan of a person in aChallenging

    Situation

    fMRI brain scan of a person in a

    Predictable Situation

    This brain is coasting on memory it already has (which uses less energy)

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 51

    Prediction

    Confirmed

    ErrorSurprise. Potential for new knowledge, learning & discovery.

    Strengthenscurrent thinking.Like re-walking apath in the snow.

    Prediction confirmation keeps you in place. Prediction error leads you out of your assumptions and forces exploration.This is because prediction error reveals a knowledge threshold.

    #3: UNEXPECTED RESULTS HELP YOU PROGRESSThe scientific approach: When a result is as-predicted it

    confirms something you already thought. When a result isdifferent than predicted you are about to learn something new.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 52

    A THRESHOLD OF KNOWLEDGEIS A LEARNING EDGE

    To reach new levels of performance a knowledge threshold has to be there

    Two points about knowledge thresholds:1) You have to acknowledge them to see them.2) You see further by experimenting, not conjecture.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 53

    Mindset 2: AN ADAPTIVE MINDSETWith this mindset you learn to operate in two zones simultaneously:

    The Zone of Apparent Certainty + the Zone of UncertaintyIn the Zone of Uncertainty:

    There is a dilemma: We want to make the best possible plan,but the optimum path will only be known in hindsight

    There are unanticipated obstacles You acquire/increase your knowledge as you go

    Expanded comfortarea

    1

    2Learning ZoneIngenuity DiscoveryLike the candle problem with the tacks in the box

    ApparentCertainty

    Mystery

    Uncertainty

    Inside your current knowledge threshold

    Outside your current knowledge threshold

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 54

    HOW DO YOU CHANGE OR DEVELOP MINDSET?(and the organizational culture)

    Psychology and brain research: Mindset can be changed.Our thinking and skills are more transformable than we thought. The brain has plasticity.

    Part 5 Changing Our Mindset

    Heres

    how it

    works

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 55

    Dendrites (receiver)CellBody

    Axon (sender)

    The human brain is estimated to contain 80-100 billion neurons, and thousands of synapses per neuron. Clusters of neurons form circuits within the brain, which underlie perception and thought.For communication between neurons to take place, an electrical impulse travels down an axon to a synapse, or gap, where transmission occurs.

    MINDSET = NEURAL PATHWAYS OR CIRCUITS

    80,000,000,000 neurons X 10,000 synapses = 800,000,000,000,000 Connections

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 56

    TrainedSynapse

    Low resistance

    Both the strength of connection between neurons (ease of impulse transmission) and the number of connections increase with use. Whatever you focus on and practice - with associated emotions - weaves a habit or pattern into your thinking. (Emotion helps determine what to imprint.)

    MINDSET IS PHYSIOLOGICAL!The synaptic gap is what allows plasticity. The way neurons

    function equips us for learning new patterns and habits.

    Neurons that fire together wire together.

    - Carla Shatz

    Every time you do something, you are more likely to do it again.

    - Alvaro Pascual-Leone

    UntrainedSynapse

    High resistance

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 57

    Because untrained synapses require more energy to fire andmaintain, the brain prefers to use already-trained synapses.

    YOUR BRAIN IS TRYING TO CONSERVE ENERGYThe 3-pound brain consumes 20% of the bodys energy

    TrainedSynapse

    Uses less energy

    Implementing

    GreenZone

    UntrainedSynapse

    Uses more energy

    Innovating

    YellowZone

    The brain learns toprefer whatever wefocus on repeatedly.As this information grows stronger through repetition it becomes wired in the brain and solidifies thinking and behaviors.Due to these preferred pathways in the brain, youre led by your brain to use them again and again, which strengthens them even more. This is how your organization's culture perpetuates itself.

    You have to see this to understand why we think and actthe way we do, and what it will take to make change happen

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 58

    SO ORGANIZATIONS ARE FACEDWITH A DILEMMA

    (A) Our brain favors existing neural pathways (comfort area)We naturally and reflexively prefer routine, familiar activity in the apparent certainty zone. It uses existing neural circuits, which require less energy. Our brain likes to focus on familiar patterns.

    (B) Meeting challenges - improving and adapting - means buildingnew neural pathways (learning area)Its impossible to remove uncertainty from the process of improvement, adaptation and creation. The way forward lies outside our current knowledge threshold, and pursuing it activates new neural circuits that initially consume more energy.

    We want to behere

    We are here Unclear

    Territory

    Obstacles

    How do we get more comfortable & skillful with this uncertainty zone?!

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 59

    The trick is to develop well-worn mental circuits not for solutions,but for a means of developing solutions along uncertain paths.This is like training in sports: To prepare for contests with unpredictable solutions, the focus of the training is not solutions,but practicing how to play.

    A SOLUTION TO THE DILEMMAHow can we be creative and effective in dynamic conditions

    if we tend to automatically apply old solutions to new situations?

    Thats exactly what the Improvement Kata is

    People can handle uncertainty, work iteratively, adjust and adapt......if they have practiced and mastered a way of doing that.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 60

    MORE KEY POINTS

    1. Mindset is the basis of our behavior and an organizations culture.

    2. Our mindset can be changed!

    3. A task in improvement, adaptation and innovation is to develop habitual mental circuits that are effective for navigating grey zones... by practicing a scientific routine like the Improvement Kata everyday under coaching guidance.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 61

    THE IMPROVEMENT KATA GIVES US SOMETHINGTO HANG ON TO IN THE UNCERTAINTY ZONEIts a kind of security blanket for the unpredictable zone

    The Improvement Kata gives us a way of having more confidence while navigating unclear territory. Ive never done that before, but I know how to figure it out and find the way. It helps us experience uncertainty more as an opportunity.

    Part 6 Conclusion

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 62

    NextTarget ConditionTarget

    Condition

    CurrentCondition

    Illustration by Dr. Lutz Engel

    The more people in an organizationwho get to higher skill levels with the Improvement Kata pattern: The more challenges the organization

    can take on The bigger the challenges it can take on The more knowledge it can build The faster it can move ahead

    INCREASING YOUR ORGANIZATIONS CAPABILITYPracticing the Improvement Kata = expanding peoples comfort zone

    ApparentCertainty

    Mystery

    Uncertainty

    Comfortarea

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 63

    ONE CONCLUSION IS BECOMING CLEARWere not going to be successful by copying Toyotas solutions

    We should be copying how Toyota develops solutions.(Which is a universal, not Toyota-specific, science-based approach.)

    The Improvement Kata and Coaching Kata are practice routines for teaching and transferring that approach.

    Once you develop proficiency with the Improvement Kata and Coaching Kata you can evolve them into kata that suit your organization.

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 64

    ANOTHER CONCLUSIONIf we only periodically conduct training events or only episodically work on improvement -- and the rest of the time its business as usual -- then according to neuroscience what were actually teaching is business as usual.

    If we want a Lean revolution, then we need to shift emphasis from staff-led, episodic improvement efforts, to daily efforts led by middle managers.

    A slice of each day should be focused on iterating toward the next target condition by applying & coaching your improvement kata.

    The Workday

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 65

    WHERE DO YOU & YOUR TEAM WANT TO BE NEXT?What challenges are you trying to meet,

    and what kata for getting there are you practicing?

    We want to behere

    We are here

    Unclear Territory

    Obstacles

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 66

    SOME NEXT STEPS

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 67

    Visit theToyota Kata Website

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 68

    Website!And also visit the...

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 69

    Short introduction to TKVideosEvents & Training ProgramsMaterials: Book, Slides, IK Handbook, 5-Question Card, The Kata CodeLinks to other TK resources and International TK Websites

    WHAT YOU WILL FIND THERE

  • Mike Rother TOYOTA KATA 70