Books
Walking the Invisible Gemba
Gemba is a Japanese term that refers to “the real place”.
Using a mind-shifting approach, Walking the Invisible Gemba guides leaders on how to avoid the costly effect of miscommunication by teaching why communication is everyone’s responsibility, how to “see” the hidden sources of poor quality and wasteful activities, the foundation of zero defects in the daily interactions of your stakeholders, how to adapt quality and continuous improvement to reduce misunderstandings.
An Interview With Failure
One thing is for sure, Failure isn’t what it used to be.
If you like learning simple, practical ways that will help you get unstuck, and thrust you forward, then you’ll love this interview. The world needs you; get your copy today and take the first step on your roadmap to success.
Lean Potion #9
Communication is the new lean frontier - are you ready to explore it?
The World is the new shop floor. Lean Potion #9 challenges readers to apply the transformational magic of Lean thinking to the waste and confusion that plague global supply chains when cultures collide and meaning gets mangled in even the simplest conversations.
El Reto Lean en Comunicación
El reto Lean en comunicación es un recorrido sobre el proceso comunicativo visto a través de la cultura y las herramientas Lean aplicadas a la comunicación. Se presentan algunos ejemplos que ayudan a comprender las ineficiencias que se podrían evitar con Lean.
Este libro es para todas las personas que forman parte de cualquier organización que buscan la excelencia, y que el pensamiento Lean les va a ayudar a conseguirla.
Lean Communication
The cost of an enterprise’s faulty communication can literally make or break a product.
Lean Communication is an introduction to concepts associated with Lean methodologies and how these can be adopted to uncover waste and drive improvements in the interactions between global participants in an organization.
Global Lean
See the new waste rooted in communication, distance, and culture.
As organizations evolve into global networks, Lean initiatives must now meet new needs. The book provides ideas, illustrations, and examples on how Lean can highlight the problems created in these interactions so they can be tackled, reduced, or removed.