Creating an Effective Management System: Integrating Policy Deployment, TWI, and Kata

Author:   Patrick Graupp ,  Skip Steward ,  Brad Parsons ,  Gregory Duckett
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138594951


Pages:   214
Publication Date:   09 July 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Creating an Effective Management System: Integrating Policy Deployment, TWI, and Kata


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Author:   Patrick Graupp ,  Skip Steward ,  Brad Parsons ,  Gregory Duckett
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   CRC Press
Weight:   0.398kg
ISBN:  

9781138594951


ISBN 10:   1138594954
Pages:   214
Publication Date:   09 July 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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We have a poster at our company that reads 'The systems you have in place are perfectly organized to produce the behaviors you are currently experiencing.' If you are seeking new behaviors and better results, new systems are the only way to get there. Creating an Effective Management System is just the book to get you started. The decades of experience-based wisdom that Graupp, Steward and Parsons share will set you on a new path to a more joyful organization and the tangible results it will produce. Rich Sheridan, CEO, Menlo Innovations; author of Joy, Inc. and Chief Joy Officer A fine book by skilled practitioners that integrates Kata and TWI, with Strategy Deployment in pursuit of an integrated management system. Well done, Skip, Brad and Patrick. Pascal Dennis, president, Lean Pathways Inc.; author of Lean Production Simplified, Andy & Me, Andy & Me and the Hospital, Getting the Right Things Done, and The Remedy Systems thinking is, and always has been, a rare commodity in management. It is what separates the ultra-high-performers from the rest. In this practical and engaging book, Patrick Graupp, Skip Steward, and Brad Parsons give a concise and extremely clear explanation of what systems thinking looks like in a healthcare setting. And they do so in a way that translates easily to any type of organization. Highly recommended! Alan Robinson, co-author of Ideas Are Free and The Idea-Driven Organization Patrick Graupp, writing with co-authors has produced an excellent series of books on TWI. This book is no exception. Although generally relevant, the first part of the book is written around hospitals. As such it is a very good introduction to Lean in hospitals, superior to all hospital-focused texts that I know of in the area. It makes use of a combination of a gear-train analogy of Lean systems together with the TWI 'three-legged stool' and policy deployment to give concise and practical guidance to hospital administrators, doctors and nurses. John Bicheno, Professor of Lean Enterprise, University of Buckingham Patrick Graupp, Skip Steward and Brad Parsons put into context the synergistic relationship between the Toyota Kata patterns that drive continuous improvement, and TWI skills that are essential along the way. The practical nature of the content makes this book a must for any leader working in any organization in any service or industry. Patrick is perhaps the best qualified person in the world in combining the theory of the TWI methods with practical application. Skip has been the driver of merging the skills and the Toyota Kata patterns supported along the way by Brad Parsons. Could the combination of Pat, Skip and Brad be any better for all our benefit? Oscar Roche, Director, TWI Institute Australia and New Zealand Where most books only discuss the successful end state, Patrick, Skip, and Brad describe a system that emerges organically as the various pieces began interacting with one another. In doing so they give us a rare insight into how systems that work actually develop - not as something deliberately engineered and then implemented, but through shepherding the process of learning. Mark Rosenthal, blogger, theleanthinker.com; Principal, Novayama LLC If you are striving to provide an amazing patient experience, eliminate preventable harm, or improve health care outcomes, you must eventually examine your Management System. Your Management System must be capable of improving the work and sustaining those improvements. Graupp, Steward, and Parsons have captured the essence of how improvement in healthcare can be both achieved and sustained. The authors will challenge you to reflect on your own Management System as you strive towards excellence. Charles V. Hagood, DSc, President, Transformational Advisory Services, Press Ganey Associates, Inc Creating an Effective Management System: Integrating Policy Deployment, TWI, and Kata is insightful - It challenges us to develop management systems where components need to work well together while building strong human relationships. Like the fact the authors explore in greater detail how well PD, TWI and Kata interact with each other. From personal experience, every management system must have these three basic components in order to be effective. Frank Gorena, Director of Operational Excellence, Interiors, Collins Aerospace In their wonderful new book, Graupp, Steward, and Parsons have put people where they belong: front and center. It's the perfect antidote to the mass of tools-focused continuous improvement advice. Dan Markovitz, Markovitz Consulting, author of A Factory of One The authors brilliantly illustrate, through numerous examples, how the strength of a management system resides in the understanding of how its key elements work together. Then, how organizations connect the dots and play the game becomes key to sustainable performance improvement. Sylvain Landry, Professor and Associate Director, Healthcare Management Hub, HEC Montreal. When Kata was first introduced ten years ago it was very apparent that the power of the combination of the practice and skills of TWI and Kata could be a game changer. Graupp, Steward, and Parsons explain their groundbreaking work and story of accomplishing this in the arena of lean management. Jim Huntzinger, President and Founder, Lean Frontiers, Inc.


We have a poster at our company that reads `The systems you have in place are perfectly organized to produce the behaviors you are currently experiencing.' If you are seeking new behaviors and better results, new systems are the only way to get there. Creating an Effective Management System is just the book to get you started. The decades of experience-based wisdom that Graupp, Steward and Parsons share will set you on a new path to a more joyful organization and the tangible results it will produce. Rich Sheridan, CEO, Menlo Innovations; author of Joy, Inc. and Chief Joy Officer A fine book by skilled practitioners that integrates Kata and TWI, with Strategy Deployment in pursuit of an integrated management system. Well done, Skip, Brad and Patrick. Pascal Dennis, president, Lean Pathways Inc.; author of Lean Production Simplified, Andy & Me, Andy & Me and the Hospital, Getting the Right Things Done, and The Remedy Systems thinking is, and always has been, a rare commodity in management. It is what separates the ultra-high-performers from the rest. In this practical and engaging book, Patrick Graupp, Skip Steward, and Brad Parsons give a concise and extremely clear explanation of what systems thinking looks like in a healthcare setting. And they do so in a way that translates easily to any type of organization. Highly recommended! Alan Robinson, co-author of Ideas Are Free and The Idea-Driven Organization Patrick Graupp, writing with co-authors has produced an excellent series of books on TWI. This book is no exception. Although generally relevant, the first part of the book is written around hospitals. As such it is a very good introduction to Lean in hospitals, superior to all hospital-focused texts that I know of in the area. It makes use of a combination of a gear-train analogy of Lean systems together with the TWI `three-legged stool' and policy deployment to give concise and practical guidance to hospital administrators, doctors and nurses. John Bicheno, Professor of Lean Enterprise, University of Buckingham Patrick Graupp, Skip Steward and Brad Parsons put into context the synergistic relationship between the Toyota Kata patterns that drive continuous improvement, and TWI skills that are essential along the way. The practical nature of the content makes this book a must for any leader working in any organization in any service or industry. Patrick is perhaps the best qualified person in the world in combining the theory of the TWI methods with practical application. Skip has been the driver of merging the skills and the Toyota Kata patterns supported along the way by Brad Parsons. Could the combination of Pat, Skip and Brad be any better for all our benefit? Oscar Roche, Director, TWI Institute Australia and New Zealand Where most books only discuss the successful end state, Patrick, Skip, and Brad describe a system that emerges organically as the various pieces began interacting with one another. In doing so they give us a rare insight into how systems that work actually develop - not as something deliberately engineered and then implemented, but through shepherding the process of learning. Mark Rosenthal, blogger, theleanthinker.com; Principal, Novayama LLC If you are striving to provide an amazing patient experience, eliminate preventable harm, or improve health care outcomes, you must eventually examine your Management System. Your Management System must be capable of improving the work and sustaining those improvements. Graupp, Steward, and Parsons have captured the essence of how improvement in healthcare can be both achieved and sustained. The authors will challenge you to reflect on your own Management System as you strive towards excellence. Charles V. Hagood, DSc, President, Transformational Advisory Services, Press Ganey Associates, Inc Creating an Effective Management System: Integrating Policy Deployment, TWI, and Kata is insightful - It challenges us to develop management systems where components need to work well together while building strong human relationships. Like the fact the authors explore in greater detail how well PD, TWI and Kata interact with each other. From personal experience, every management system must have these three basic components in order to be effective. Frank Gorena, Director of Operational Excellence, Interiors, Collins Aerospace In their wonderful new book, Graupp, Steward, and Parsons have put people where they belong: front and center. It's the perfect antidote to the mass of tools-focused continuous improvement advice. Dan Markovitz, Markovitz Consulting, author of A Factory of One The authors brilliantly illustrate, through numerous examples, how the strength of a management system resides in the understanding of how its key elements work together. Then, how organizations connect the dots and play the game becomes key to sustainable performance improvement. Sylvain Landry, Professor and Associate Director, Healthcare Management Hub, HEC Montreal. When Kata was first introduced ten years ago it was very apparent that the power of the combination of the practice and skills of TWI and Kata could be a game changer. Graupp, Steward, and Parsons explain their groundbreaking work and story of accomplishing this in the arena of lean management. Jim Huntzinger, President and Founder, Lean Frontiers, Inc.


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Patrick Graupp, Skip Steward, Brad Parsons

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