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Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Who is Visiting? Have any feedback on this Blog?

Hello, reader. Thanks for visiting my Lean Blog! If you'd like to share anything about your background and/or interest in lean, please click on the "Comments" link below. You can post comments here (or to discuss any article) without registering with Blogger.com even.

Here are some reader/listener comments.

From the basic site stats I get from statcounter.com, this site gets visitors from countries including the U.S., the U.K., Columbia, Singapore, France, Australia, and Canada, among others. It's fascinating to see how lean manufacturing is spreading throughout the world!

If you'd like, leave a post answering any or all of the following:

1) Location (city/state/country)
2) Company name / type of company (industry, size, etc.)
3) Your role in lean manufacturing (consultant, manager, engineer, etc.)
4) How long you have been learning lean
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge?
6) What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions? I hope you are finding this site useful. I'm enjoying putting it together.

Mark

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87 Comments:

At 11:44 PM, April 19, 2005, Blogger Mark Graban said...

Location: Phoenix AZ USA

Company: industrial products, large multinational conglomerate

Role: internal lean consultant, working with production teams

Been learning/working with lean for 10 years.

Biggest challenges include:
- management alignment on lean vision and goals
- building management discipline to "get things done" and follow up on standards and improvements

 
At 8:05 PM, April 20, 2005, Blogger jp said...

Location: Dallas TX USA

Company: Global provider of stored electrical energy solutions

Role: Lean/Six Sigma leader for NA operations

Time with Lean: 8 years direct

Challenge: Teaching operators to internalize continuous improvement; teaching managers to create a system that makes it easier for operators to do so

Thoughts: Great site with on-target editorial. I'd like to see more comment and discussion from other visitors.

Keep it up!

 
At 8:46 AM, April 21, 2005, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...

Hello Mark

I am a consultant mostly in Theory of Constraints (TOC). However, Lean is of great interest to me, because it combines perfectly with TOC. I am from Medellin, Colombia. Keep up the good work!

PS - I see there are only two subscribers...have you promoted this Blog in other places to get more? Can I help in any way?

Thanks

 
At 8:49 AM, April 21, 2005, Blogger Mark Graban said...

Thanks! I knew we had a visitor from Columbia. We've only had a few people leave comments, but we have about 25 visitors a day. I know we have a handful of repeat visitors, people who come back at least once a week. One thing I was hoping to do here was to build some lean community on the site.

I've promoted the site a bit through some lean email lists I'm a part of, can probably do that again (NWLEAN, APICS, etc.). I've also tried to promote this through on-line word of mouth and a few ads that I've placed on google.

Please tell your friends and colleagues about the site.

 
At 4:44 PM, April 21, 2005, Anonymous Vicki said...

Location: Florida
Company: Electronics Contract Mfg.
Role: Financial Analyst
Learning Lean: Just started
Biggest Challenge: Getting mgmt support for initiative
Feedback/Suggestions: Good articles. Agree with premise need to improve current/future competitiveness of US Mfg. As we outsource innovation, we outsource our competitive edge as a country.

 
At 8:55 AM, April 22, 2005, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location: PA
Company: Industrial MFG
Role: Quality

Feedback: try posting some links on the lean.org forums

 
At 4:32 PM, April 22, 2005, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Location: USA
2) Company name / type of company: software provider for lean transformations
3) How long you have been learning lean: 3-4 years
4)Any feedback or suggestions? I've just subscribed and hope to get interesting perspectives on real-world lean implementations. Especially interested in mixed model (aka high mix-low volume or HMLV) lean.

 
At 2:43 AM, May 20, 2005, Anonymous Robert said...

1) Location:
Fremont, CA. USA
2) Company name / type of company:
NUMMI, Automotive manufacturer
3) Your role in lean manufacturing:
New Toyota rule, all team members must receive TPS training
4) How long you have been learning lean:
About 8 years
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge?
Conveying to others that their jobs are in jeopardy if we do NOT change our focus and process
6) What do you think of this site?
Maybe a little more content. Otherwise, with some reader interaction, this could stir up some great discussion.

 
At 10:21 AM, May 20, 2005, Blogger Mark Graban said...

Maybe a little more content. Otherwise, with some reader interaction, this could stir up some great discussion.

Thanks for visiting, Robert. Could you elaborate on what you mean by "more content"? I hope you'll come back and help get the discussions going.

 
At 8:23 AM, May 29, 2005, Blogger Shivananda Prabhu said...

Hi
Location : India
Company/Type of Company: Manufacturing(Non Ferrous Metals)
Functional Role: Head of Planning and Logistics
Been Learning /Practicing Lean : Last 2 yrs
Comments on the site : A fantastic blog, and a source of inspiration.Pls keep this up and going ...

 
At 11:29 AM, May 31, 2005, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location: Virginia
Company: Fitness Equipment Manufacturer
Hands-on Lean exp: Since last six months

Lean Sucesses: SuperMarket implementation, worker buy-in for assembly cell creation

Challenges: Difficult to motivate people for improvements when they are buzy doing the tactical things


Harry Shah, student at Virginia Tech, Lean Manufacturing Intern at this company

 
At 2:10 PM, June 07, 2005, Blogger Christian said...

1) Location: Houston, TX
2) Company name / type of company: Medical/Pharmaceutical R&D equipmenent mfg.
3) Your role in lean manufacturing: I'm the Industrial Engineer here so I see can see across departments and seem to be the only one that cares!
4) How long you have been learning lean: Jan 2003. Attended a speech by Tony Barnes, one of Deming's associates in Japan after WWII. Great speaker really got me fired up.
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? Lack of managements interest/understanding. We are a busy shop, why change?
6) What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions? I hit it weekly, I look forward to others comments.

 
At 2:12 PM, June 07, 2005, Blogger Christian said...

And I post my little $0.02 rantings here....
http://manufacturinginamerica.blogspot.com/

 
At 1:54 AM, July 14, 2005, Blogger JB said...

1. Company Location: Northern Utah
2. Company Name: TPS - ThroughPut Solutions
3. Your Role in Lean Manufacturing: I run a small Lean consulting firm and love to help people get Lean even off the clock.
4. How long have you been learning Lean?: Just about 10 years now and I'm still learning.
5. What is your biggest implementation challenge?: Just like most of us it's getting senior management to fully commit and follow through. They tend to be extremely busy and need to delegate more.
6. What do you think of this site?: I really enjoy reading Mark's and other comments on articles and new Lean ideas.

 
At 5:27 PM, September 20, 2005, Blogger Kathleen Fasanella said...

1) Las Cruces NM USA
2) Fashion-Incubator.com (apparel manufacturing resource site)
3) Proponent, practitioner, writer & consultant
4) Since 1992, before I knew it was called "lean".
5) Getting people to read and learn about it, to say nothing of trying it. My site stats drop when I write about it and that in spite of the fact that the hottest apparel manufacturer (Zara) in the world is lean!
6) Other than upgrading your site to MT or WP for their robust features, I have no thoughts yet as I'm still digesting and looking for like-minded folks interested in implementing these strategies in small to midsize enterprises.

 
At 1:57 PM, October 01, 2005, Blogger Eric H said...

1) Las Cruces, NM, USA
2) NewTec, contractor
3) manager
4) Lean, per se, about a year. TQM, etc., about a decade
5) Getting supervisors to set aside time from their already hectic schedules to conduct experiments, getting technicians to follow standard procedures or to let others know about their great innovations (very distributed work environment)
6) I enjoy reading it, but no helpful feedback, as yet

 
At 5:21 PM, October 08, 2005, Anonymous Benjamin R. said...

1. Company Location - Reynosa, Mexico
2. Company Name - Maytag Mexico
3. Role - Internal LeanSigma consultant
4. How long learning about Lean Lean - 13 years
5. Biggest Implementation Challenge - Getting past passive agressive middle managers
6. This site - Enjoy reading it; sort of a community of practice for me

 
At 12:23 PM, November 11, 2005, Anonymous Eric Christiansen said...

1) Location - Cedar Rapids, Iowa/New York City
2) Company name - OmniLingua Inc - provides translation and other language services to various industries
3) Role - President of company; also Deming Institute instructor
4) How long you have been learning lean? - focused more on Deming System of profound knowledge (which encapsulates lean principles) since 1998
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? - transition of staff from being "compliant" to being "committed" and "enrolled"
6) What do you think of this site? - I don't access the site directly much; most access is via blog aggregation tool. Like the articles and pointers towards other great articles.

 
At 11:21 PM, December 06, 2005, Anonymous Jinjer Markley said...

1) Location (city/state/country)
Oakland, CA, USA

2) Company name / type of company (industry, size, etc.)
Asarum, collaborative clothing, sole proprietorship with no employees

3) Your role in lean manufacturing (consultant, manager, engineer, etc.)
In my dreamlife as the owner of a much larger, lean fashion operation

4) How long you have been learning lean
6 months

5) What is your biggest implementation challenge?
Since it's just me so far, I have a hard time objectively evaluating my own practices for waste, and I don't have a manger to turn to for help. or capital to hire one.
Problems I anticipate once I have a bigger business:
1) fabric. Fabric is frequently defective (gets messed up whe you wash it), and must be purchased in huge lots, so I'll have to keep inventories.
2) rampant outsourcing and hefty fines and fees for being a contract sewing facility makes them REALLLY cost-conscious, so I anticipate alot of resistance to lean practices that take workers off the line. Plus, a lot of them won't speak English, so to communicating with the workers may be hard.

6) What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions?
I'd like more explnation of articles you link to & more definitions of buzzwords and acronyms.

 
At 3:00 PM, December 15, 2005, Blogger Bill said...

Thanks for the reminder of the Dice Game from The Goal. I used it last week in a value stream mapping workshop. It worked perfectly in driving home a key point about the client's process.
1. Location: Athens, GA, USA
2. Management consulting
3. Lean teacher, facilitator, consultant
4. Over 20 years learning lean
5. Biggest implementation challenge: 8 wastes vs. traditional accounting systems
6. This is a very helpful site for practitioners!!

 
At 10:28 AM, December 16, 2005, Blogger Ralf said...

Hi Mark,

you are doing a great job and in connection with Jim's website www.lean.org there should be lots of new input for getting change to LEAN:-))

1) Leipzig, Germany
2) BMW AG, Plant Leipzig, automotive OEM
3) Processplanner
4) Got hold of "Lean Thinking" at university some 10 years ago and since then I am constantly chasing possibilities to implement "Lean"
5) Implement the Lean idea in a cleary defined work area together with the entire shop floor staff showing that LEAN is worth the effort:-)
6) Excellent site to get new views on LEAN and an easy way to get in contact with lean thinkers:-)

Regards from Leipzig and keep up the good work

Ralf

 
At 8:23 PM, January 17, 2006, Blogger pdca said...

Mark,

1) Columbus, Ohio - Go Buckeyes
2)Circuit Breaker Assembly
3) Focused Factory Manager
4) Took some courses at a technical college starting in 1997
5) Changing the culture to continuous improvement
6)I don't get the chance to visit the site as much as I would like, but I always learn something.

PDCA

 
At 1:02 PM, March 28, 2006, Blogger Karen Wilhelm said...

) Location: Dearborn Michigan
2) Company name / type of company Society of Manufacturing Engineers
3) Your role in lean manufacturing Editor, writer and student. Office and information lean projects
4) How long you have been learning lean: Acquainted with it - 20 years; writing - 5 years; projects - 2 years.
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? Murky processes; different processes for similar things; not being able to participate in factory kaizens (invite me, please)
6) What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions? I like the survey of visitors - I will have to do it on my blog - leanreflect.blogspot.com. And you always have insightful things to say about lean and business.

Karen

 
At 12:06 PM, March 29, 2006, Anonymous Mia Horberg said...

Hi Mark!
1) Chicago, IL USA
2) eMvoy.com (we're a new search engine specifically for finding US manufacturers) we're very tiny right now.
3) My role is really just that I'm interested in finding out more about it and promoting it on our site (eventually).
4) n/a
5) n/a
6) So far I'm really enjoying your site. It's great to be able to casually get information and learn more about the obstacles and accomplishments others are facing in the manufacturing community. Keep up the great work!

 
At 11:24 AM, April 10, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Location: Toledo, OH
2) Diversified manufacturer of ind. goods
3) Your role in lean manufacturing - Internal consultant
4) How long you have been learning lean- 6 years
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? To get past the quasi commitment of executives to lean and the misunderstanding of lean vs. cost savings.
6) What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions? Great site- It would be wonderful to share more examples about lean practices.

 
At 11:46 PM, May 25, 2006, Blogger Nash said...

This post has been removed by a blog administrator.

 
At 1:27 AM, May 26, 2006, Blogger Nash said...

) Location: Brisbane, Australia
2) Company name: non-electric explosives manufacturer
3) Bussines Improvement manager
4) Experiencing lean for 5+ years
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? I have done several lean implementation projects from a whole plant tranformation to a couple of work cells or areas, the biggest challenge i face today is motivating the people after a change has happened and reached saturation level.
6) What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions? Been looking for something like this site for ages, i think its great.

 
At 3:42 PM, June 12, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Location: Tegucigalpa, Honduras

2) Company name: undisclosed (it's a small town after all) ...manufacturing company with sales of US$50 mill/year, 3,500+ employees, 6 plants

3) Your role in lean manufacturing: continuous improvement manager

4) How long you have been learning lean: 3 years

5) What is your biggest implementation challenge?: keeping sponsors engaged

6) What do you think of this site?: it´s about time!

 
At 4:44 PM, June 19, 2006, Anonymous Dan said...

1) Location Bremerton, Washington
2) Company Non-profit Applied Research and Development Company
3) Your role in lean manufacturing Project Manager for Lean Six Sigma Implementation at government facilities
4) How long you have been learning lean All my life. Formally for about 8 years
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? Convincing Civil Servents that they are empowered to change their workplace for the better.
6) What do you think of this site? This is my first visit. Ask me again later.

 
At 4:27 PM, June 26, 2006, Blogger Manny said...

1) Location: Atlanta, GA USA
2) Company: Egoli Business Solutions (management consulting - www.egoliblog.blogspot.com)
3) Role: Consultant
4) How long you have been learning lean: 15 years
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge?
- Getting the 'good news' out there.
- Getting the cultural change in organizations necessary to drive value and continuous improvements.
6) What do you think of this site?
Great site. You are right on the money. Keep up the good work.

 
At 4:21 PM, July 12, 2006, Anonymous Curt said...

1) Columbus, Ohio - Go Bucks!
2) Riverside Methodist Hospital (One of the busiest in the country)
3)Process Improvement Specialist
4) 5 years of lean, although previously focused more on Six Sigma
5) Change Management - hospital employees are not factory workers, much harder to change.
6)Very interesting site. Especially enjoyed the scissors "lean" improvement joke.

 
At 9:51 AM, July 13, 2006, Anonymous Rus said...

Mark,

1. Houston, TX
2. Omron
3. Business Analyst
4. I was at i2 for 3 years as a programmer, I suppose that SCM optimization is in its way a LEAN philosophy. I have just been thrown into a full blown LEAN focused company.
5. This is it. But honestly it doesnt look to be that big. For sure there is a lot of work to be done, much to learn and many processes to improve.
6. I stumbled on to your site because I was looking for a nice "kaizen" graphic to use as a desktop background. Something to see first thing every day to get me thinking about Kaizen.

 
At 7:50 PM, July 22, 2006, Anonymous Peter Jones said...

Bolton, UK
NHS and webmaster
'Student of Lean & Life-long learner'
Great blog - really informative and thought provoking. I have added a link at:

http://www.p-jones.demon.co.uk/links.htm

listed under - 'Ideas'.

http://www.p-jones.demon.co.uk/
Hodges' Health Career - Care Domains - Model
h2cm: help 2C more - help 2 listen - help 2 care

 
At 7:02 AM, July 31, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1. Finland.
2. A design and manufacturing company specializing in rolling stock interior projects.
3. Project Manager with process development and internal ERP consultant duties.
4. Been learning lean for maybe a year; previously I've worked in a very decent kaizen environment for six years. I've audited both EFQM and 9001 systems for a few years. This seems like a natural extension.
5. Obtaining and maintaining senior management commitment.
6. Just arrived on your site and will be coming back. A very promising beginning, keep up the good work!

 
At 11:27 PM, August 03, 2006, Anonymous JWDT said...

1) Location:
Kansas City, MO USA
2) Company name / type of company:
A Division of a Healthcare Company, have also worked for several Fortune 50 Companies (GE, Emerson, Delphi, Sprint, Learjet-Bombardier)
3) Your role in lean manufacturing:
Pretty much the whole spectrum, internal consultant/designer, engineer/supervisor, lean leader, etc to external consultant.
4) How long you have been learning lean: Roughly 10-12 years, nice thing is you never stop
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge?
Corporate buy-in, Ignorance is # one especially with this huge push for Lean & Six Sigma integration..if you roll out Lean correctly you will very rarely use Six Sigma and then only as a problem solving tool, not as a philosophy.
6) What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions? Finally found something refreshing aside from the other sites.

 
At 6:22 PM, September 11, 2006, Anonymous morg said...

What is the difference between autonomation vs automation?

 
At 5:32 PM, September 18, 2006, Anonymous JWDT said...

Some would say at initial blush semantics. Others know that it hinges upon using technology to assist and aide the employee to create more value added activities or time to the process, instead of automation which replaces the employee with a mindless machine.

Example: Instead of building a machine to consistently drop a piece of sub-assy on top of another assy, why not design it to be close? You will still need that resource to do the final placement because of the various factors related to the placement (i.e. line speed, variation in centering holes, variation in material, etc.). Point is, why spend $1 MM to design the perfect machine up front, use technology to assist the worker, eventually over time the "machine" will replace the worker but not until all the bugs have been worked out.
That is my two cents worth....

 
At 5:28 PM, October 02, 2006, Blogger SysteMental Advisor said...

Location: Fort Wayne, IN
Company Name: SysteMental, Inc.

My Role in Lean: Consultant, Owner of a company specializing in helping executives accomplish their most difficult objectives relative to Lean.

How long learning Lean: Since 1996

Implementation Challenge: Helping Top Management understand how to show their support and comittment.

Feedback or suggestions: The site is a great idea. I am too new to the site to make suggestions. I look forward to visiting often.

 
At 5:14 PM, October 11, 2006, Anonymous Wolverine said...

1. Location: Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA (Go blue!)
2. Organization: University of Michigan Hospital
3. My role in lean manufacturing: Consultant / engineer
4. How long you have been learning lean: book knowledge for 6 years, 1 year of practice
5. What is your biggest implementation challenge?
-Change management
-Helping people see how lean tools fit with CQI tools they've been using
-Helping groups learn how to continue improving without direct support from a 'coach'
6. What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions?
-I enjoy the site and find the postings very interesting and helpful.

 
At 3:01 AM, October 17, 2006, Anonymous Andreas Gut said...

1. Location: Sindelfingen, Germany
2. Organization: Software Development (!)
3. My Role: Besides my development tasks I'm acting as a coach for agile and lean software development methodologies
4. We are now experiencing lean methodologies for 3 years. I started reading books and articles on TPS mid of this year.
5. We are actually far away to be called lean. It's challenging, frustrating and exciting to introduce lean ideas into an organization which is inert and mostly not willing to change minds though it propagates to follow agile and lean ideas. It's hard to proceed when resistance sustains.
6. Not sure what I should think about the site. I have to visit it regularily and then I will assess it ...

I made my post here just to show that lean thinking also 'penetrates' non-production areas. Software development has a huge potential for lean ideas ...

Regards Andreas Gut

 
At 7:36 AM, October 18, 2006, Anonymous Andrew said...

1) Location (city/state/country) London UK
2) Company name / type of company (industry, size, etc.) National Health Service, 1.3 million employee's give or take
3) Your role in lean manufacturing (consultant, manager, engineer, etc.) Improvement Consultant specialising in Lean / TPS / 6 Sigma, I joined the health service after 10 years in the US and UK working in manufacturing and completing my Post Grad at Cranfield University
4) How long you have been learning lean - 13 years give or take
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? Whole Organisation Turnaround - 2-4000 staff, 400m in revenue, very large projects engaging large numbers of managerial and clinical stakeholders
6) What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions? I hope you are finding this site using. I'm enjoying putting it together. Just started, but like what I see.

 
At 12:37 PM, October 25, 2006, Blogger Lean Fushion said...

Location: Minnesota USA
Industry: Semiconductor industry
Role: Corporate Lean Facilitator
Yrs. experience: 3 year Lean journey
Challenges: Teaching management and operators that Lean is a team effort and takes steadfast dedication from all involved or things will fail.
This site: I Think the site is a great forum to express thoughts and ideas around the topic of Lean. The site also provides a useful tool to learn new practices and to express success and failures within your own Lean journey.

 
At 10:48 AM, November 01, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Location: Jefferson, Oregon USA
2) Company name / type of company: Design and assembly of windshield wiper systems; other applications for electric DC motors.
3) Your role in lean manufacturing: Human Resources (and therefore training on Lean)
4) How long you have been learning lean: Under one year.
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? Me! (Just learning)Also, I struggle with management giving "lip service" in meetings and passing great teaching moments by completely on the floor.
6) What do you think of this site? It is great! I just discovered the podcasts. Any feedback or suggestions? Keep going for at least 50 years. I hear that is how long it is going to take to change the culture here at work. :)

 
At 3:12 PM, November 14, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Midwest manufacturer of physical and electronic security equipment.
3 year old company now.

Serve as R&D Engineer mostly it seems, and also President and COO

Began as an employee of Honda. Since then have learned through implementation and study as a student at MIT's LFM program.

Biggest implemetation challenge is maintaining, in the words of Deming, a "constancy of purpose",
in the face of changing demands and
distractions.

Terrific Site.......

 
At 11:36 AM, December 08, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Location: SAN DIEGO, JAPAN AND BRAZIL
2) Company name: HONSHA.ORG - AN ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF TOYOTA MANAGERS AND ENGINEERS
3) Your role in lean manufacturing: TPS/LEAN COACH
4) How long you have been learning lean: 13 YEARS IN TOYOTA CITY, JAPAN. TOYOTA BRAZIL, VENEZUELA AND KENTUCKY.
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge: CULTURAL BARRIERS. FINANCIAL AND R&d STAFF.
6) What do you think of this site? THIS SITE IS REALLY INTERESTING.

 
At 12:46 AM, December 11, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Location: Canby, OR
2) Company Name: MEC Northwest
3) Role in lean mfg: Mfg Manager
4) How long have been practicing lean: 3 years
5) Biggest implementation challenge: Creating a lean Culture
6)What I think of this site: A lot of good information. It has been interesting reading the posted info on this site

 
At 4:15 PM, December 11, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location: Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Type of company: Hospital
My role: Director of Lean Improvements
How long?: About 5 years
Biggest challenge(s): Learning the culture of the organization (I'm new to health care) and adapting the Lean tools
The site: I think the site is great - a way to share thoughts, swap stories, and keep abreast of recent developments. It's now on my daily "web surfing" list.

 
At 4:09 PM, December 12, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location - New London, CT
Role - Consultant
How long - 15 years
What is your biggest implementation challenge - Wall Street and the nearsighted quarterly EPS focus it creates.
This site - A welcome R&R (Recharge and Refocus) stop on the Lean journey

 
At 3:00 AM, December 13, 2006, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location: China (I'm Swedish though)
Type of company: Switchgears
My role: Production Engineer
Biggest challenge(s): To introduce lean thinking to the Chinese.
The site: I would appreciate some more info on lean in China.

 
At 8:24 PM, January 22, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location: India
Type of Company: Software
Role: Communications
Biggest Challenge: Trying to the get the idea across that systems and processes are largely responsible for results
The Site: Great stuff

 
At 6:04 PM, January 27, 2007, Blogger Bhupesh said...

Location: Toronto,Canada
Type of company: Automobile
I am Industrial engineer from India,but in canada i am looking for professional job.I am intrested in lean and i want to do certificate course in Lean Manufacturing . Can you advise me about it?

 
At 12:27 PM, February 11, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location: Louisiana, USA
Company: Cell Phone Towers and Structures
Industrial Engineer and Grad Student
Think the Lean Blog site is great.
Industrial Engineering students would gretly benefit from visiting this site often to get an idea of how lean effects working industrial engineering professionals in their everday lives and keep abreast of new developments.

 
At 9:24 AM, February 27, 2007, Anonymous Bryan said...

1) Location - Vermont, USA
2) Company name / type of company - Consumer goods
3) Your role in lean manufacturing - internal consultant
4) How long you have been learning lean - 7 years
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? - Getting managers to lead by thinking lean.
6) What do you think of this site? Great website.

 
At 10:27 AM, March 01, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Location - Appleton, WI USA
2) Company name / type of company - Integrated Health System
3) Your role in lean manufacturing - internal lean facilitator
4) How long you have been learning lean - 3 years
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? - Creating a lean culture.
6) What do you think of this site? A lot of good information. I also enjoy the podcasts.

 
At 3:12 PM, March 06, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location: Missouri
Conpany: Poultry
Role: Lean Coordinator
Experience: 1 1/2 yeas
Biggest Implementation Challange: Continusly coming up with motiviational material to encourage and Motivate Managers. They are all on the mindset of turning Lean, but when things hit the fan, everyone gets on the firefighting mode. Being a company that has several years on their Lean Journey, a lot of times, we fail to support our Lean leaders and focus on nothing other than production.

 
At 2:59 PM, March 16, 2007, Blogger Pilchard said...

Location: Sussex, United Kingdom
Company: Time 24 Ltd. Manufacturing and integration of electrical and electronic systems. Approximately 300 employees over four sites.
Role: Lean Facilitator and 5S Co-ordinator
Time learning Lean: Three months and counting.
Biggest implementation challenge: For me, I feel the biggest challenge is the "We've done Lean before and it didn't work!" attitude.
Thoughts on Lean Blog: I think the site is fantastic and the podcasts are very informative. Lean Blog has inspired me to start my own "Lean Journey" blog. I look forward to referencing this site in the very near future!

Thank you, Lean Blog!

 
At 3:31 PM, April 15, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location: Prudence Island, RI USA
Company: regional industrial trades tabloid newspaper
Role: editorial and production
Biggest challenges include:
Keeping the readership informed about trends in manufacturing and finding resources to help them learn about and apply proven strategies to their own operations.

For years I've been running articles about the benefits of lean, listing lean classes and workshops in our events calendar and trawling the MEP sites for usful information. This blog brings the topic of lean to life in a unique and entertaining way. I intend to recommend it to our readers in our upcoming issue, because it makes you *want* to learn more about lean. Thank you for creating leanblog.org!

 
At 9:42 PM, April 17, 2007, Blogger Ron Pereira said...

1) Keller, TX, USA
2) $3B industrial equipment company
3) Corporate MBB deploying Lean and Six Sigma
4) LSS for about 12 years
5) Normal stuff... knuckle heads
6) Rock on Mark!

 
At 8:52 PM, April 19, 2007, Blogger sbguy78 said...

1) Newport, RI, USA
2) U.S. Navy Lab
3) Mechanical Engineer
4) 3 years
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? - Getting everyone, from management down to the line engineer to see the value and applicability of Lean Manufacturing ideas to their work. I think I "get it," but it will take the leadership of management to pull everyone else into Lean practices.
6) I read this site every day through Google Reader. Good move in changing to the leanblog.org site, as blogspot is blocked at my lab.

 
At 3:14 AM, May 19, 2007, Blogger Bima said...

It's great blog. Really help & support my activities.

Now i have been in 3 years working with TPM - Total Productive Management.

I am waiting for next podcast discussing about Toyota Talent.


Bima
TPM Education & Training Pillar Leader
Certified Six Sigma Black Belt
Multi Bintang Indonesia Tbk.
Heineken Group of Companies

 
At 4:20 AM, May 24, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sheffield/South Yorkshire/United Kingdom

The University of Sheffield Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre with Boeing/Aerospace manufacturing, 60+ employees; We primarily work in the machining of titanium, nickel and inconel. We have reduced machining times more than 80% on titanium components.

Biggest implementation challenge: Industrial psychology - Convincing companies to adopt a new technique that is better than thier current method is very difficult.

 
At 4:24 AM, July 25, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Location:
Ann Arbor, Michigan / Taipei, Taiwan
2) Company name / type of company:
University of Michigan / Consumer goods
3) Your role in lean manufacturing:
Student / Business process re-engineering
4) How long you have been learning lean: 2 years.
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge?
Convincing people to buy-in to projects, getting the 'real' process from interviewing people when shadowing is not feasible.
6) What do you think of this site?
Great!

 
At 9:30 AM, August 19, 2007, Anonymous dwr@msgs said...

1) Location:
Monroe, Michigan
2) Company name / type of company:
Mainstream GS LLC / Consulting - Organizational Transformation via a Lean platform.
3) Your role in lean manufacturing:
Continuous Process Improvement Master Consultant
4) How long you have been learning lean:
20 years.
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge?
a. The comprehension and adaptation to Value Stream
b. Organizational Learning - Engagement at all levels (middle mgrs are frequently more of a struggle than top level mgrs).
c. Lean advocates/practitioners who know just enough to be dangerous. Gotta love the enthusiasm, energy, and action; but patience, observation, and understanding have to blend in.
d. Properly scoping the desired end state and incorporating a strategy of implementation.
e. Inadequate commitment to infrastructure supporting sustainment of the advances made during implementation.
6) What do you think of this site?
I appreciate what you are doing. Your post on going to GEMBA fits here because I consider blogging like going to GEMBA in the Lean industry. I agree with one of your readers (2005) about getting conversations going.
You can note my support for discussions in an entry I made on your "Error Proffing Challenge" post a few days ago as your first anonymous commentor and dwr@msgs.
Since the discussion stopped when I challenged some of the talk there I may have scared everyone away with the thought of a ittle bit of analysis, or they were turned off by my style, or that topic had run it's course, or d) all of the above.
In Lean, we all need a Sensei and we all need to be willing to learn and see ourselves as part of a bigger picture.
Just like the environments we "Lean", we never really arrive.

Keep up the nice work!

 
At 11:46 PM, August 31, 2007, Blogger thefastfifty said...

Great blog, Mark, thanks for your comment on my blog. And great turnout on this survey, eh!

1. Richmond, VA, USA
2. Virginia Commonwealth University is a university of 30,000 students and John Tyler Community College is a community college about 20 miles south of Richmond.
3. Student, observer, intern (soon, hopefully), eventually entrepreneur and/or consultant
4. Just a few months...I started reading a biography of Fredrick W. Taylor this spring, so I've gone from there.
5. Not applicable (yet).
6. I'm into it but I'm not yet a frequent enough reader to have a strong opinion. The best part is being able to keep up on how news events affect or are affected by the Lean perspective

 
At 11:35 AM, September 04, 2007, Blogger Mike T said...

1) Location (city/state/country) - Aberdeen, SD, USA.
2) Company name / type of company (industry, size, etc.) - Hub City, Inc., Div of Regal-Beloit, Corp. Mechanical Drive Systems, 350 facility (10,000+ Corporate).
3) Your role in lean manufacturing (consultant, manager, engineer, etc.) - Lean Facilitator (Internal Consultant to various plants).
4) How long you have been learning lean - Since 2001 specifically, Cellular Manufacturing & Problem Solving since 1998.
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge? - Overcoming fears and traditional beliefs at all levels.
6) What do you think of this site? Any feedback or suggestions? - As always, excellent work Mark. Been viewing/posting on the site for around 1 year, figured it was about time to complete the "Who is visiting" page!

 
At 10:28 PM, September 19, 2007, Blogger Kanishk | कनिष्क said...

Location: Cincinnati, OH

Company: Lareg diversified multinational conglomerate

Role: Continuous Improvement/
Quality Engineer

Six Sigma Black Belt with 3 yrs of experience in process improvement.

Biggest challenges include:
- Leading culture change
- Driving Six Sigma Projects in traditional manufacturing mindset
- Managing teams without having direct authority over them

 
At 8:07 PM, September 20, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Location: Florida

Company: Medical device manufacturer

Role: Manufacturing Supervisor

Biggest challenges include:
Culture change
Culture change
Culture change
and
Culture change

 
At 2:55 AM, September 28, 2007, Anonymous Cliff Fiore said...

Hi Mark,

I applaud your blog and your efforts in promoting Lean. My profile is very similar to yours, amd I am also based in the Phoenix area. My focus in terms of Lean implementation has been in the area of product development. Based on my work, I have authored two books on the subject. My most recent, entitled Accelerated Product Development, published by Productivity Press, outlines an approach of combining Lean and Six Sigma to achieve the goals of reducing product development cycle time, cost, and quality defects. I welcome everyone to critique this material and share thoughts related to the expansion of Lean implementation beyond factory walls.

 
At 8:40 AM, September 28, 2007, Blogger Mark Graban said...

Cliff - thanks for saying hi. My original comment is out of date, I now live in the DFW area. I'll have to try to check out your book sometime, but I don't work in the product dev space. Maybe one of my blog readers can do a review for us.

 
At 12:17 PM, November 21, 2007, Anonymous Stacy Quickstad said...

Location: Racine / Milwaukee, WI USA
Company: Non-Profit Social Service & Consumer Goods Manufacturer
Role: Manager of Manufacturing Portion of Department
Learned about lean through business classes. Not much hands on experience.
Biggest Challenges: Lack of Resources, Aversion to Change, Company Culture, etc.

 
At 1:41 PM, November 24, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Reggio Emilia /Italy
2) Caterpillar
3) Buyer
4) Just Started :-)

Nice Blog

 
At 12:34 PM, December 16, 2007, Blogger Rearden said...

Location: Philadelphia, PA
Company: coal mining
Role: Owner
New to lean, but not new to Six Sigma

Challenge: restoring innovation to American industry.

Thoughts: No more PowerPoint presentations; no more IT boondoggle projects; no more leveraging, core competencies, hundred thousand foot views, takeaways and other consultantspeak. Interested only in getting back onto the linoleum to make something.

 
At 7:39 AM, January 03, 2008, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1 - Durham, NC, USA

2 - Burt's Bees World Headquarters,
Maker of the finest natural personal care products on the planet

3 - CI and IE Manager, Sensei to EVP

4 - I have over 12 years in lean

5 - Biggest challenge: operations management that haven't lived through a transformation...we could move much faster :(

6 - I love the site...keep the podcasts coming...thanks to Deborah Porto for telling me it was here. :>

If you want to consider a career in natural personal care, JSchmitzer@burtsbees.com.

Have an awesome 2008!

 
At 3:17 AM, January 13, 2008, Blogger Brian Z Jones said...

1) Lodi / CA / USA
2) Kyoho Mfg California / Tier 1 NUMMI supplier
3) Group Leader / TPS Kōhai
4) 3 years
5) Workforce buy-in
6) Just found the site.

-bZj

 
At 4:45 PM, February 06, 2008, Anonymous Shane B said...

1 - Portland, OR, USA

2 - I'm an ultra-low key recruiter who specializes in the IT & LEAN sectors. Surprise - it's a great time to be involved as an expert in either arena.

3 - As a recruiter, I work with regional/national clients when they need to hire IT or Lean experts.

4 - I've been learning "learning about" lean in fit's and spurt's for 3 years now as a recruiter. I wish the vulcan mind-meld were possible, then I'd have a chance at retaining more.

5 - I find this site insightful and exhaustively interesting. Kudo's. . .

 
At 4:16 PM, February 07, 2008, Blogger Erik said...

1) Location: Dombühl, Germany
2) Company: Clopay Plastics
3) Role: Plant Manager
4) How long you have been learning lean: 1.5 years
5) What is your biggest implementation challenge?
-balancing what the organization is capable of doing and digesting and not overloading the organization. Priorities.
6) What do you think of this site?
I started listening to the podcasts before this site, and after a number of them decided to look up the site. It is now on my links ribbon, and gets checked daily now.

 
At 6:02 AM, March 15, 2008, Anonymous Vishnu Rayapeddi said...

1)Location: Auckland, New Zealand
2)Company: Productivity Solutions Limited
3)Role: Principal Consultant
4)Experience: Manufacturing and Supply Chain all rounder - have implemented a number of productivity improvement projects both in Manufacturing and Supply Chain.
Associate of CMI Consortium of ITO's (Industry Training Organisations) in NZ
Member of: Auckland Chamber of Commerce, NZ Production & Inventory Control Society, Employers and Manufacturers Association
5)Biggest Challenge: Convincing the senior management of businesses that they need to implement lean to be competitive locally and globally
6)Biggest Achievemnet - Doubled the productivity in less than 4 weeks in a fabrication busness using continuous flow concept
7)Services we offer: Lean Manufacturing, Lean Supply Chain & Distribution, Lean Office, Lean Healthcare and Business Integration Solutions
8)This site is great to share knowledge

 
At 1:52 AM, April 02, 2008, Anonymous Sutton Burleigh said...

Alabama

LEAN Greenbelt for a global bioscience corp.

Involved for 2 years and will be forever

Biggest Challenge: Providing culture change to create a continuous improvement environment.

Biggest Upside: LEAN makes sense to everyone.

 
At 9:58 PM, May 12, 2008, Blogger nazia said...

1) Location: Saitama Ken, Japan.
2) Company- Semiconductor, LCD manufacturing
3) Role- Internal lean consultant
4) Been learning/working with lean for 3 years.
5) Biggest challenge: getting the president, who hired me to learn and practice lean.
6) Thoughts: Great Blog, very informative. Do visit Japan sometime. its a great learning experience.

 
At 1:21 AM, July 16, 2008, Blogger Jayadeep(JDP) said...

Location: Bangalore, India
Role : Lean software consultant
Discovered lean via agile and lean software development
Biggest challenge: badly need some exposure in a lean software development environment
Thoughts: Lean was a lifechanging discovery for me, and I want to evangelize and use lean in all aspects of life, it fits well with my 80-20 philosophy as well

 
At 5:45 AM, August 09, 2008, Anonymous C Whittaker said...

Location: Perth , Western Australia
Company : Bartter Enterprises
Role: LSS Black Belt,Develop CI into processes.
How long: 3 years 6S Green Belt and 6 months LSS Black Belt.
Biggest Challenge: Changing Workplace Culture

I think this Site is a great resource and library of experience , initiatives and best practice sharing.

 
At 12:21 PM, November 19, 2008, Anonymous Juliet L. Rogers said...

Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Company: Karlsberger Healthcare Consulting / hospital planners and lean consultants
Been working with lean for 3 years.

Biggest challenge:
In addition to shorter term operational improvement projects, my company specializes in the pre-design services related to planning and construction of new hospitals. The biggest challenge for us is assisting clients with the ability to envision major changes that not only will take place in their current environment, but imagining an unfamiliar process is a yet-to-realized built environment.

I am a former hospital administrator turned consultant and love every minute of my job.

Your site is a great place to see what others are doing and especially, what everyone is struggling with.

Juliet L. Rogers, PhD, MPH
Karlsberger Healthcare Consulting
jrogers@karlsberger.com

 
At 7:30 AM, December 25, 2008, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Germany
2) lean consulting, 25 employees
3) lean consultant
4) since 4 years on "my lean journey"

 
At 11:38 AM, February 03, 2009, Blogger Melissa Vitteri said...

Columbus, Ohio
Anshen+Allen, architects, +350
Internal and external implementation research,

Great site and link resources.
thanks.

 
At 5:00 AM, February 27, 2009, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1) Location: Scotland., U.K.
2) Company- Contract Manufacturer
3) Role- Test Engineer
4) Been learning/working with lean for 2 years.
5) Biggest challenge: Keeping up the momentum, very easy to slip back into old ways when under pressure.
6) Thoughts: Task of implementing Lean is never done, complete (like housework). This is probably the most important concept to learn (i.e. Continuous Improvement).

 
At 7:31 PM, June 15, 2009, Anonymous Tim McMahon said...

Westfield, MA
Fiber Optic Manufacturer
Lean Leader
more than 10 years
The challenge is teaching people to "see" the waste right in front of them.
I have been a long time follower.

Check out my blog - A lean Journey
www.leanjourneytruenorth.blogspot.com
Tim McMahon

 
At 10:49 AM, July 11, 2009, Anonymous Garrett said...

Walton Kentucky
Automotive seating components and subassemblies
Manufacturing Engineer
1 year.
1) company has pushed toward lean however the philosophy is not understood to be embraced effectively which causes more problems (e.g., radical inventory reductions without pulling suppliers in to plans)

 

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