A popular search term for people coming to the blog is “lean manufacturing quotes.” I'm not real big on using quotes and don't have a ready collection handy, but I thought I would reach out to you, the blog readers. Maybe we can form a collection of quotes here for people to find and use?
I thinking of sayings and quotes from Toyota leaders (Shingo, Ohno, etc.) and some of the prominent lean writers and lean thinkers. You can either submit them by adding a comment below, or send them to me by clicking here. Please provide the source for the quote when you can.
Now, I don't mean “slogans.” These aren't things to be hung on the wall in a factory, like “Safety is YOUR job.” Those are demotivating, as Dr. Deming pointed out and I certainly agree with that sentiment.
I'm talking about good or pithy quotes that can be reminders or learning points for all of us.
You can easily come back to this page via www.leanblog.org/quotes.
Scroll down on this page to read the quotes that people have added as Comments to this post. That's the collection.
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Check out my latest book, The Mistakes That Make Us: Cultivating a Culture of Learning and Innovation:
“The most dangerous kind of waste is the waste we do not recognize.” – Shigeo Shingo (Toyota)
My favorite Shingo Quote:
“We have to grasp not only the Know-How but also ‘Know Why'”, if we want to master the Toyota Production System”
My most frequently used Ohno quote:
“All we are doing is looking at the time line, from the moment the customer gives us an order to the point when we collect the cash. And we are reducing the time line by reducing the non-value adding wastes.”
“Fall seven times. Stand up eight.”
Old Japanese Proverb.
Found at the “Got Boondoggle” blog.
“If you see a snake, just kill it – don’t appoint a committee on snakes.”
Ross Perot, referring to GM. This could apply to lean, the “just do it” mentality of kaizen.
You have to manage a system. The system doesn’t manage itself.
W. Edwards Deming
My friend Terry Begnoche is fond of quoting Dr. Deming as having said “A bad system will beat a good person every time.” It provides needed consolation when it looks like you just can’t produce the results you want.
I’ve recently heard the Deming quote the same way. I always thought it would be more clear to say “A bad system will DEFEAT a good person every time.”
By “beat”, you might wonder if that means to “do better than.”
Someone might interpret that having any system, even a bad system, is better than relying on a skilled person.
The way the quote is intended though, is absolutely correct. Good people will struggle when being part of a bad system. Look at how many “good doctors” make mistakes in surgery. It’s not just “bad doctors” with a bad track record, it’s “good” doctors working in a bad system, where it’s easy to make mistakes and not catch them.
Agree Mark – thanks for sharing this.
I don’t have the book in front of me, but in Workplace Management, Ohno said something similar to ‘the only place that work and motion are the same thing is the zoo where people pay to see the animals move around’. This strikes me mostly when I sit in meetings that take longer than necessary to derive consensus.
“The most valuable of all talents is that of never using two words when one will do.” – Thomas Jefferson
“You can act your way into good thinking faster than you can think your way into good actions.”
I’ve also seen this as, “Act your way into a new way of thinking, rather than trying to think your way into a new way of acting.”
This one is for the Lean implementers out there…
“Your Lean Process should be a Lean Process.”
Pretty basic idea; but not so common in practice.
“Progress is impossible without the ability to admit mistakes.” Imai
“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but habit.”
Aristotle
Tell me and I will forget, show me and I may remember, involve me and I’ll understand.
These are some of my favorite:
“Where there is no Standard there can be no Kaizen” Ohno
“Quick and Crude is better than Slow and Elegant”
On change: “Different isn’t always better…but better is always different”
It was really Masaaki Imai who said the quote about standards and kaizen, at least in a documented way:
Imai wrote:
“Where there is no standard, there can be no improvement. For these reasons, standards are the basis for both maintenance and improvement”
https://kindle.amazon.com/post/GBA0QH2MAOFP
Ohno might have agreed and Imai might have learned this from Ohno…
“We will win and you will lose. You cannot do anything because your failure is an internal disease. Your companies are based on Taylor’s principles. Worse, your heads are Taylorized too. You firmly believe that sound management means executives on the one side and workers on the other, on the one side men who think and on the other side men who only work.”
Konusuke Matsushita
“Why not make the work easier and more interesting so that people do not have to sweat?
The Toyota style is not to create results by working hard. It is a system that says there is no limit to people’s creativity.
People don’t go to Toyota to ‘work’ they go there to ‘think'”
– Taiichi Ohno, co-creator of the Toyota Production System
found at http://www.dwightbowen.com
No man or woman does it all by themself (TEAM)
“Continuous Improvement is not about the things you do well – that’s work. Continuous Improvement is about removing the things that get in the way of your work. The headaches, the things that slow you down, that’s what Continuous Improvement is all about.”
Bruce Hamilton from the Toast Kaizen dvd, president of GBMP, said this. He rocks : )
Bruce should have his own quote page. He just has a way of stating very complex ideas simply and elegantly. Another one of my favorite Bruce-isms, I use it any time a “knowledge worker” suggests that Lean thinking does not apply to them:
“In my world, all work is knowledge work.”
Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently.
-Henry Ford-
From Jim Womack:
“Managers will try anything easy that doesn’t work before they will try anything hard that does work.”
“If Lean is common sense, it would be more common”
“You should not need an MBA to understand the numbers in your company.”
Jean Cunningham
Time waste differs from material waste in that there can be no salvage.
— Henry Ford
“Variation breeds inventory.” (Shingo?)
Everyone gets the experience; some get the lesson.
— T.S. Eliot
Planning is priceless.
The plan itself is useless.
–Gen. Binford Peay
US Army Gulf War Leader
That quote is from Dwight Eisenhower
The exact quote seems to be “In preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.”
“It is management that cause companies to fail, not employees”
“A foolproof system is no match for a system-proof fool!”…
Lean marketing is a challenge. Introducing creative people to standard work is not without some pain .. here is a comment that I received from one ..
“I suppose one ought not to employ a magician and then complain that he does not behave like other people.”
* Time waste differs from material waste in that there can be no
salvage. The easiest of all wastes and the hardest to correct is the waste
of time, because wasted time does not litter the floor like wasted
material… Henry Ford, 1926
* I shall try to correct errors when shown to be errors, and I shall
adopt new views so fast as they appear to be true views… Abraham Lincoln,
1862
* If you need a new process and don’t install it, you pay for it
without getting it. … Ken Stork, past president of AME
To go along with the quote-“Different isn’t always better…but better is always different”
If you want better, then learn to be different.
“You can act your way into good thinking faster than you can think your way into good actions.”
“Without changing our patterns of thought, we will not be able to solve the problems that we created with our current patterns of thought.”
~ Albert Einstein
This is one of my favorite quotes by my CEO:
“I would rather get a person to think than buy a new car. After all, a car is just a piece of metal.”
– Anthony P. Hales
“First we’ll make it work – then we’ll make it pretty”
– my crusty old former boss
“Go slow to go fast.”
Toyota expression
It’s only the last turn of a bolt that tightens it – the rest is just movement. ~ Shigeo Shingo
“Failure to change is a vice! I want everyone at toyota to change and at least do not be an obstacle for someone else who wants to cahnge.” ~ Hiroshi Okuda, Senior Advisor, board memeber and former chairman of Toyota Motor Corp.
“Even the greatest idea can become meaningless in the rush to judgement. To gauge an idea as feasible we must cut our ties to the status quo and find the balance between constructive criticism and judgment. Within that balance we will uncover crucial input for making our ideas a reality.” – Shigeo Shingo.
“It is not necessary to change. Survival is not mandatory.”
– W. Edwards Deming
“All models are wrong. Some models are useful.” – Demming
Benjamin Franklin’s 5-Why Analysis:
For want of a nail a shoe was lost,
for want of a shoe a horse was lost,
for want of a horse a rider was lost,
for want of a rider an army was lost,
for want of an army a battle was lost,
for want of a battle the war was lost,
for want of the war the kingdom was lost,
and all for the want of a little horseshoe nail.
“You may never know what results come of your actions, but if you do nothing there will be no result.” -Ghandi
Actually “For Want of a Nail” is an old proverb that has been around since c.1390
Benjamin Franklin definitely did not create this.
“All models are wrong […]” attributed to George Box, “”Robustness in the strategy of scientific model building”, 1979
“The road to success is always under construction” (chinese proverb)
One of my favorite quotes –
Never mistake motion for action – Ernest Hemingway
“It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.” Charles Darwin
Not Darwin.
http://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/six-things-darwin-never-said
Thanks, Kevin!
“In God we trust. All others, bring data.”
W. Edwards Deming
“The method outlined also leads to an important principle which all should work to, and which will do much to correct the usual policy found in shops. It can be stated as follows:
The method to follow in getting the work through a shop is not to apply pressure at A towards B, but to draw a B from A.(emphasis is author’s)
This means a ‘pull’ type instead of a ‘push’ type, as one man expressed it.”
From Installing Efficiency Methods, by C.E. Knoeppel, 1917
“Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak, Courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.”
-Sir Winston Churchill
If management is not removing the obstacle, they are the obstacle!
“The Biggest room, is the room for improvement” – chinese proverb
Thanks, Ted, for: “I have been impressed with the urgency of doing. Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Being willing is not enough; we must do.” Leonardo da Vinci
“In times of change the learners will inherit the earth, while the knowers will find themselves beautifully equipped to deal with a world that no longer exists.”
Eric Hoffer
“Do you believe that you can learn how to become a Marine by reading books and applying what you learned? NO!”
“Be quick, but don’t hurry.” John Wooden
“Reward those who Do,
Train those who Can’t,
Replace those who Won’t”
Henn’s Creed
Albert Einstein once said “The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results”
didn’t he know probability theory?
From Duke, quotes of Shigeo Shingo:
Real waste lurks in places that don’t look like waste.
Time is merely the shadow of motion
Four goals of improvement: 1) make things easier 2) better 3) faster and 4) cheaper
Delays are less a matter of time and more an effect of timing
It is more important to know-why than know-how
Unless people’s motion add value they are useless toward the goal
Are our specifications or frequencies too tight for accomplishing the task?
There are two reasons why we change. We learn enough that we want to or we hurt enough that we have to
“”Only fools worship their tools””
Dee Hock
Just saw this in Quality Digest:
"The only man who behaved sensibly was my tailor: he took my measure anew every time he saw me, whilst all the rest went on with their old measurements and expected them to fit me.”
-George Bernard Shaw
"People say that motivation doesn't last. Well, neither does bathing – that's why we recommend it daily." – Zig Ziglar
I was kind of surprised to not see this lean quote posted yet…
"There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all" – Peter Drucker
Two of my favorites from Pascal Dennis:
"Complexity is a crude state; simplicity is the end of a process of refinement."
"At Toyota a manager's job is to practice and teach P-D-C-A."
No one has more trouble than the person who claims to have no trouble. – Taiichi Ohno, father of the Toyota production system.
From the "Hitchhiker's Guide to Lean". The formula to assess changing the culture:
HxVxF > R
H is Hatred for the current reality, V is the Vision of the ideal state, F is the courage to take the First Steps (take a risk), and R is the natural resistance to change.
"Corporate executives are…accustomed to keeping up with the latest management fads through books, seminars, executive education. The danger with attempts at learning TPS through such means is that some readers have a tendency to think that if they've read about something they know it." John Shook from the Forward of The Toyota Way Fieldbook
From Isao Kato, Superfactory, 13 March, 2006, in Art Smalley's article "TPS versus Lean: Additional Perspectives":
"Clear awareness of problems and a very low tolerance for the current condition is the proper attitude and the right starting point for TPS or Lean."
There's ALOT of other good thinking in this piece, collected by Art Smalley (find it on his website), including Kato's comments on the origins of lean, jidoka (and how we are missing it in the U.S.), and the role of supervisors. This "starting point" quotation is just one favorite, really pithy bit.
-ALB
Sign above my desk “The desire to do good work is seldom satisfied by just getting by”. Richard Sennett
“One thing you can’t recycle is wasted time.” – Ohno
In which book or paper ohno said that?
I don’t know, but the quote is floating around the internet if you Google it. That doesn’t mean Ohno absolutely said it or wrote it…
Made me think of my favourite internet quote from Lincoln:
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/392376186254773675/
“Applying the Toyota Production System outside the shop floor can be done but this takes some creativity”, Fujio Cho
“it’s simple but it’s hard”
Without data its just an opinion!
What about Standard ?
This highest Standard you are able to implement is the lowest level that you will obtain
“Change is like heaven, everyone wants to do it, but not right now.”
“Culture eats strategy every time” from “Good to Great”.
“Change before you have to” Jack Welch.
Almost all quality improvement comes via simplification of design, manufacturing… layout, processes, and procedures.
Tom Peters
Excellent firms don’t believe in excellence – only in constant improvement and constant change.
Tom Peters
Thanks to Andrew Bishop:
“90% of resistance is cautionary”
-Shigeo Shingo (attributed!)
This New York Times page has a number of great Toyota quotes.
Good, Better, Best
Don’t ever let it rest…
Until your good is better,
and your better is your best.
A camel’s hump is an ugly lump,
Often found in the zoo,
But uglier yet,
Is the hump we get,
From having too little to do.
“Reducing costs is reducing quality.
Increasing quality is reducing costs”
(source unknown)
“We are good at applying open heart surgery, where a plaster would have sufficed.
And we are good at applying a plaster, where open heart surgery would be appropriate”
Professor Elie Wiesel (on http://twitter.com/#!/eliewieselfdn):
“Computers have all the answers” the young man said. “Yes,” replied Professor Wiesel, “but they don’t know the questions.”
Photographer Ansel Adams (from his book: The Camera):
“… avoiding the common illusion that creative work depends on equipment alone …”
[…] Some Ohno quotes from this post’s comments: […]
If you always do what you’ve always done. You always get what you’ve always got….
The last thing I say after a training course
Every action is an opportunity to improve.
Whose quote is that, Ken?
Mine, I use it with our in-house lean training.
“If you always do what you always did, you will always get what you always got.”
(A. Einstein)
“A great product requires mediocre processes with brilliant employees, or mediocre employees with brilliant processes.”
I have no idea who this quote is from, but heard it in a course.
It just stuck with me. Me somebody knows who said it.
I don’t know the origin, but I’ve heard a quote attributed to a Toyota leader, saying something a bit different:
Dan Jones recounted they said:
“Brilliant process management is our strategy. We get brilliant results from average people managing brilliant processes. We observe that our competitors often get average (or worse) results from brilliant people managing broken processes.”
Source:
http://www.lean.org/common/display/?o=15
“A standardized process without a mechanism for change is a shackle.”
“Amateurs work until they get it right. Professionals work until they can’t get it wrong.” – Author Unknown
“The impossible is often the untried.” – Jim Goodwin
“Many people think that Lean is about cutting heads, reducing the work force or cutting inventory. Lean is really a growth strategy. It is about gaining market share and being prepared to enter in or create new markets.” – Ernie Smith, Lean Event Facilitator in the Lean Enterprise Forum at the University of Tennessee
“The first rule of any technology used in a business is that automation applied to an efficient operation will magnify the efficiency. The second is that automation applied to an inefficient operation will magnify the inefficiency.” – Bill Gates
“Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently.”- Henry Ford
Even a kick in the ass is a step forward!
-Unknown BB
I’m not sure that’s really a Lean thought there…
[…] Lean Quotes Collection (4056) […]
“Good tools will never be a substitute for poor management”
As I teach people about on flow I use these :
“Flow is like water in a nice stream. It doesn’t pause, it doesn’t overtake, it just …. flows”
“Stability is the moneymaker in any process.”
“Only start running when you know you can finish in time”
“I don’t care if you have to stop a machine, I even don’t care if people have to stop as long as the product is moving”
and on culture:
“Together we are creating the workplace where you want to work”
And on Process:
“we are all getting older, so if your father can’t do this job, we should redesign it now”