Welcome problems, find success

(1 avis client)

Un livre rare, de Nate Furuta, sur le vrai enjeu et challenge du lean : aimer les problèmes, parce qu’ils nous font grandir et qu’ils nous mènent au succès.

Nate Furuta nous montre comment Toyota crée et entretient cette culture d’organisation apprenante.

Pour en savoir plus, regardez ce Book Club Lean dédié au livre.

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Description

In this book, author Nate Furuta, former chair and CEO of Toyota Boshoku America Inc., shares the story of his decades of experience directly leading the establishment of Toyota cultures outside Japan. Furuta was the first Toyota employee on the ground at New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. (NUMMI), Toyota’s joint venture in California with General Motors, where he directly led the establishment of the most revolutionary labor-management agreement in the history of the US auto industry. In addition, Furuta was the first Toyota employee on the ground in Georgetown Kentucky at Toyota’s first full-scale, wholly owned manufacturing operation outside Japan, where he led (working directly with President Fujio Cho) the establishment of Toyota’s general management systems and culture there.

This book tells the stories of establishing successful operations in those two iconic organizations as well as others. Furuta reveals details, both stories and process descriptions that only he can tell. He takes you along as he and others lead Toyota’s intense globalization from the early 1980s to recent days. He introduces you to the critical leaders in Toyota’s history, such as Taiichi Ohno and Fujio Cho as well as Kenzo Tamai, the head of the company’s HRM function in the 1980s.

This book is not about human-resource management (HRM) policies and procedures. It provides a deep dive into the way senior leaders embody deep awareness of HRM matters, developing and executing company strategy while at the same time developing organizational capability. The role of senior leaders isn’t just a matter of directing the company to achieve objectives; it is a matter of building the capability to achieve those objectives, consistently, and further developing capability as it executes. Key to this is to develop the awareness, attitude, capability, and practice of identifying problems as progress is made toward achieving objectives, which is, in fact, attained through steadily eliminating each problem as it arises. This becomes a self-reinforcing loop of the organization, tapping in to the essence of solving problems while simultaneously developing ever better problem-solving skills and better problem solvers. This loop propels an organization toward meeting its purpose while developing capability for capability development.

Essentially, this book reveals Toyota’s general management systems from the firsthand experience of a Toyota Japanese senior manager and describes, with stories and process examples, the attitude, behaviors, and systems needed to successfully establish and lead in a true Lean business environment.

Pour en savoir plus, regardez ce Book Club Lean dédié au livre.

ACHETEZ CE LIVRE ICI 

 

1 avis pour Welcome problems, find success

  1. Perrick

    Rechercher activement les problèmes est peut-être la phase la plus déstabilisante d’une démarche Lean. Entre la peur du messager et la hantise de la vulnérabilité, les écueils sont nombreux. Il s’agit pourtant de la phase initiale, le fameux Find de la Stratégie Lean. Ki yoshi “Nate” Furuta a travaillé pour Toyota aussi bien aux Etats-Unis qu’en Europe, donc loin des bases japonaises pétries de kaizen depuis des dizaines d’années : il propose dans cet ouvrage un témoignage éclairant sur l’accueil des problèmes. D’abord parce qu’il ne vient pas des équipes industrielles ou de production : son service initiale est la Direction des Ressources Humaines, une fonction qu’on n’évoque que rarement dans la littérature Lean et qui est pourtant cruciale quand on souhaite développer les gens. Ensuite parce qu’il évoque aussi (et peut-être surtout) ses propres problèmes, nous permettant ainsi de le suivre dans ses explorations de résolution : « no problem, no kaizen ».

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