Does your organization have a mindset for continuous improvement?
The daily routines of your organization shape its culture. Scientific Thinking can be a driver for a continuous improvement culture. One of the best ways to learn how to think scientifically again is by following the set pattern of the Improvement Kata.
The term “kata” means a way of doing so when we say “Improvement Kata” it’s a way of improving.
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A Mindset for Improvement
By Leigh Ann Schildmeier on Jul 21, 2022 4:52:00 AM
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Why Improve our Processes?
By Leigh Ann Schildmeier on Jul 14, 2022 8:15:00 AM
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Folding Towels
By Leigh Ann Schildmeier on Jun 14, 2022 7:52:00 AM
Did you know there’s a right and wrong way to fold a towel?
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Why Process Map?
By Leigh Ann Schildmeier on May 5, 2022 12:15:29 PM
A picture is worth a thousand words. Many of us are very visual people.
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Clean Up for Savings (with 5S)
By Leigh Ann Schildmeier on Apr 13, 2022 8:34:54 AM
With today’s economy, households are finding ways to cut out excess expenses such as the daily latte or going out to dinner. Families are identifying where their money is being wasted by looking at unnecessary habits and then making changes that impact their bottom line (budgets).
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Deliberate Practice in Action
By Leigh Ann Schildmeier on Jan 26, 2022 7:02:57 AM
The strongest part of my golf game has always been my short game. Depth perception is essential for determining the distance around the green. In early 2022, I discovered that my vision loss has affected my depth perception and, therefore, my short game.
I am truly grateful that I am able to be back swinging a golf club. Rather than be frustrated, I thought I would try some of my own advice that I generously have given out over the years on chipping. Later, I realized that I was using Deliberate Practice to relearn the basics of chipping.
I was practicing chipping in my backyard like I've done for years. I was struggling to land near the targets, and as I kept hitting balls, it wasn't getting better. Rather than be frustrated, I remembered my GOLF ADVICE: chipping is like tossing a ball and imagining the club is just an extension of your hand.
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Jumping to Conclusions
By Leigh Ann Schildmeier on Jan 12, 2022 9:09:00 AM
Have you ever had a doctor make a quick diagnosis without asking you for more information on your current situation? “You’ve always had sinus issues, so your headaches are just sinus pressure.”
It’s an easy thing to do – in fact, we all do it many, many times every day … at home, in our relationships, driving, and certainly at work.
It’s called “cognitive bias,” and it’s a way for our brains to make decisions more quickly and efficiently. Without completely conscious thought, our brains use pre-existing information to run algorithms based on our previous experiences and fill in the blanks.
It’s a powerful mechanism that helps our brains process the massive amounts of information and decisions we have to make every waking moment, but when it comes to making decisions about new situations, our unconscious biases and preconceived notions can create a problem.
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Production Boards & Peanut Brittle
By Leigh Ann Schildmeier on May 27, 2020 10:08:44 AM
During quarantine, we’ve all had to get back to basics with many things. At our house, that has included eating at home more, which, of course, means cooking more. We are both great cooks, but we rarely seem to have time to make our meals at home. So, while we have a repertoire of meals that we create from memory, this time is different, so, let's try some new things. Or, as it turned out, some old things.
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Lean & Green
By Angela Barbosa on Apr 22, 2020 1:42:58 PM
Earth Day feels odd this year. With much of the U.S. and Europe still in #stayathome mode, the internet is flooded with images of crystal clear canals in Venice, smog-free skies in L.A., and the shrinking "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico. For all of the devastation wrought on humanity by COVID-19, our collective efforts to #flattenthecurve have Mother Earth breathing at least a temporary sigh of relief.
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Thanksgiving Standardized
By Leigh Ann Schildmeier on Nov 26, 2019 1:12:04 PM
Standardizing your processes can create repeatable and reproducible results. We know that standardizing can make you more efficient by reducing or eliminating non-value added activities. Why wouldn't we want to do that so that we can spend more time with her family? Isn't that what the holidays are all about?