ABSTRACT

The ground-breaking Shingo Model of 2008 introduced principles, systems, tools, and results. At that time, however, the systems element of the model did not receive the in-depth attention that other parts of the model did. As a result, organizations developed their own concept of systems. Some organizations have identified hundreds of systems and tools. In fact, the distinction between a system and a tool was not clearly defined until recently with the introduction of the Shingo SYSTEMS DESIGN workshop and the information discussed in this book.

With the development of the workshop, the Shingo Institute is now teaching the three essential systems—work, improvement, and management—as well as the five required communication tools that are necessary to improve an organization. You’ll find that when these systems are formalized, they work together to help create organizational excellence.

With Systems Design: Building Systems that Drive Ideal Behavior you’ll learn how to formalize the process of creating these three systems. In addition, a new tool, the Shingo system design map, is introduced. This book also details how you can improve the connections you’ve already made between the tools, systems, results, and principles of the Shingo Model.

chapter 2|12 pages

Systems Overview

chapter 3|10 pages

Three Essential Systems

chapter 4|14 pages

Five Required Tools

chapter 5|6 pages

What Do We Mean by System Design?

chapter 6|14 pages

Work Systems

chapter 7|14 pages

Improvement System

chapter 8|10 pages

Management Systems

chapter 9|20 pages

Case Studies

chapter 10|6 pages

Results

chapter 11|12 pages

System Thinking