Yankelevitch, Sam.,

Lean communication : applications for continuous process improvement / Sam Yankelevitch and Claire F. Kuhl. - First edition. - New York, New York (222 East 46th Street, New York, NY 10017) : Business Expert Press, (c)2015. - 1 online resource (xix, 92 pages) - Supply and operations management collection, .



1. The cost of complexity: the impact of language, culture and distance on operations -- 2. A process called communication: an opportunity for waste in our daily interactions -- 3. Acts of unintended communication: our actions and the messages they send -- 4. Continuous improvement of the communication process: VSM, 5S, PDCA, and more -- 5. The tip of the tip of the iceberg: bringing the issue to the surface -- 6. A leadership challenge: use lean thinking in global communication -- References -- Index.

Four decades ago, the most progressive companies, particularly those in the manufacturing sector, embraced an aspirational notion stoically named Zero Defects. It was a broad corporate call to action in an era with no Internet, elongated supply chains, multicultural, multilingual, cross-generational work teams, or multiple time zones. It was to ensure that products would be better, work-related accidents down, and profits larger if people did not make mistakes. Today with the kaleidoscope of disruptive forces in business transactions, the speed of commerce and the ferocious level of competition for consumer loyalty and business survival--the cost of an enterprise's faulty communication can literally make or break a brand or product. There is now more than ever the urgency that how people connect to each other to move business forward must be foolproof.




Mode of access: World Wide Web.
System requirements: Adobe Acrobat reader.

9781631572395


Communication in management.
Lean manufacturing.

global teams lean communication lean leadership lean manufacturing lean supply chain supply chain

HD30 / .L436 2015