Written by: Nigel Richardson
It’s Monday and you and your attendees are together ready for the Kaizen event.
There is some excitement and apprehension in the air.
This blog will take you through 4 tips to successfully facilitate your week, focusing on two levels:
This is the easy bit, the plan, what “should happen” and as you can see below each day covers a key improvement phase building on the level of definition and measurement that has been completed in the prep.
When prepping the detail, I would normally produce a summary slide much like this daily summary, but with a morning and afternoon section. I also highlight a 30 min sponsor out-brief section at the end of every day.
In this Kaizen event agenda summary slide example you can see that each day provides an opportunity to utilize some of the improvement tools that we have covered in previous sections:
From a facilitation perspective, this whole week can be viewed through a “diverge and converge” perspective.
We have talked about the potential risk of being overwhelmed with complexity and differences of opinion and perspective at a grand scale.
This ability to lead the group through phases of diverging and phases of converging is critical.
The goal of the facilitator is initially to diverge, gain a volume of different thoughts and perspectives, limit deep diving, group think or polarizing of opinion.
Once that broad cross section of content is captured the facilitator’s mind is drawn to converging this thoughts to ensure that the top priority items receive the focus they deserve.
This happens at many points in a Value Stream event and looks something like the below for the week overall:
Some things to consider from my experience facilitating these events.
If you are running your first event then seriously consider having another facilitator with you who has done these events before. If you do not have this luxury, then always be looking for ways to lighten the load for yourself:
You have been using the phrase “just go with it” quite a lot during Monday and Tuesday as people get to grips with a mindset and tool use that was previously alien to them.
However, there will normally come a point where the group genuinely wants to approach a section in a different way than the way suggested.
For me, for some reason, it was always a Wednesday afternoon.
This is a good thing, and for me, it represents a shift in accountability from a group of people following your direction to actually a group that is bought into the process and wanting to take more ownership of the outcome.
Give them this opportunity and you will see an interesting shift to a group managing their own facilitation during the individual agenda items.
This frees you up to keep an eye on the macro agenda, come in when you are asked for support (they will now call you over).
Also, this allows you to handle the “Crowd Control” role we mentioned earlier.
As the group is working you are able to walk stakeholders through the walls of information.
I remember running a workshop with 30 participants on my own.
On paper, it was going to be so much harder, but in reality, I think it can be easier with a few key pointers:
Firstly, create table teams of no more than 6-7 people and ensure each one of those tables:Allow more time:
Having meticulously planned and expertly executed your Kaizen event, the next step is post-workshop.
Here, never has it been more important for you to focus, communicate and follow through on a project plan to put into action the improvement opportunities identified over the course of the week.
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Nigel Richardson is a continuous improvement expert. His background spans 20 years in business transformation and continuous improvement across retail, pharma, aviation and IT supply chain. He is passionate about supporting organizations to achieve their strategic, transformational and improvement goals, and outperform their peers year after year.
If you’d like to talk more about your strategic challenges, reach out to him on nigel.richardson@i-nexus.com or connect with Nigel on LinkedIn for the latest Strategy Execution insights.