ABSTRACT

This book helps business leaders see how employees, companies, and missions all interact with each other, as well as with society at large, in systems and subsystems at various levels. It helps leaders learn how to connect the dots, becoming customer-centric in everything they do and then spreading the same goals down to their supply chains.

The book discusses what is, and what is not, leadership, covering such topics as statistics-based management, process-improvement, and human resources. The author accomplishes this through a blend of Lean culture and managerial theory, as well as his military experience.

In addition, the author contrasts many opposing subjects, such as efficiencies of scale versus efficiencies of build, automation versus process improvement, process innovation versus product innovation, technical versus tactical proficiency, and pull versus push production.

With most books focused on Lean initiatives, there is a tremendous amount of benefit involved in creating customer value while reducing waste, but this book takes a holistic approach, blending in modern managerial theory, team leadership skills, and economics. The result is a book that changes how the reader approaches business.

Essentially, the purpose of this book is to blend modern management theories with the culture of Lean (and perhaps a sprinkling of economics) to show current business leaders how to create organizations that are as customer-oriented and highly efficient in delivering value as possible. If one thinks of each role in an organization as a spot on an assembly line, where everything each person does creates output someone else uses, the question becomes whether or not each person’s activities maximize the effectiveness of others. Do we, as organizations, set ourselves up for success or for failure? Most companies, if they answer honestly, would say, "A little bit of both." This book is about helping those companies improve.

chapter 1|14 pages

The Corrupt Way to Make Money

chapter 2|9 pages

The Limits of Demand and Systems Thinking

chapter 3|10 pages

Layoffs, Trust, and Changing Cultures

chapter 4|18 pages

Automation and Bottlenecks

chapter 5|12 pages

Maturing Markets

chapter 7|9 pages

Statistics Based Management

chapter 9|5 pages

Quality

chapter 10|9 pages

Supply Chain Management

chapter 11|8 pages

Human Resources

chapter 12|7 pages

Project Management and On-Time Delivery

chapter 13|7 pages

Strategic Decision Making

chapter 14|4 pages

Executive Team Operations

chapter 15|6 pages

Marketing Operations

chapter 16|4 pages

Waste

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

Lean Leadership Requires Systems Thinking