The whiteboard in my office has become a working draft for our IT leadership visual management board. And it’s become a focal point of discussion as I socialize the idea with our IT VPs, directors and managers. I’m encouraged that everyone who gets the walk-through supports the idea and sees the value in it. They see the potential it has to address some fundamental problems in how we work as a department.
Ownership of the board is shifting to the team. I’m using color coded sticky notes to add ideas and pose questions. I’ve encouraged IT leaders to stop by and put their own sticky notes up as we develop it together.
Some have asked if they should do something similar with their own team. The answer is yes! We need to commit at the leadership level and model behaviors. But to truly be effective, each team should have some kind of visual management and huddle that rolls up to the leadership huddle. I encourage any leaders who are ready to start experimenting in their own area to do so. It doesn’t have to be perfect — it’s fine to experiment.
I will be meeting with my partners on this effort next week to shape it and figure out the next steps. This includes Andy Kinnear, Director Project Management Office and Operational Effectiveness; Bryan McDowell, Information Security Officer; and Jennifer DeFrancesco, Director, Change Management and Training. They all have experience with lean and will be important partners and champions on our journey.
We should move from the working draft to our first experiment in a few weeks. We’ve identified a potential wall space large enough for the visual board — it’s near our VP offices and has room around it for huddles.
Here are the initial goals I’ve drafted — I expect we’ll refine them together next week:
- Reduce cycle time (or as I say, “get things unstuck”)
- Reduce preventable incidents
- Reduce variation
- Increase coordination and communication between teams
- Ensure we deliver on top priorities
The sections of the visual board are taking shape:
- Top priority initiatives: track progress and issues that need to be addressed
- Production environment and major incidents: track incidents, root causes and steps to prevent reoccurrence
- People: celebrate accomplishments
- Everyday Lean Ideas (ELI): provide a central place for staff to suggest improvements
- Metrics: track key department wide metrics
The draft visual board has “current state” documents pinned to it as I go through my discovery on existing processes. No need to create something new if we already have it, but we may need to refine some processes and make sure that they are consistently followed.
For example, we already have a daily 8:30 a.m. call that all managers and lead staff participate in to review incidents in the last 24 hours, high priority tickets, standard changes and upcoming events. This is a great start to the leadership huddle and visual board that we’ll be rolling out.
Some of my key learnings as an aspiring lean leader that I share with others are:
- Have a partner — an overall program owner and driver.
- Let go so others can develop and shape it
- Experiment and don’t get stuck on perfection
- The whole team has to own it
I will definitely listen to my own advice and that of others as we move forward with our lean efforts.
“If a picture is worth a thousand words, information made visible in the workplace is priceless” according to Michael A. Orzen and Thomas A. Paider, co-authors of the book “The Lean IT Field Guide, A Roadmap for Your Transformation.” This is my latest lean book purchase. I will be studying it and sharing it with my partners on this journey.
[This piece was originally published on Sue Schade’s blog, Health IT Connect. To view the original post, click here. Follow her on Twitter at @sgschade.]
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