What is
Kaizen? - Definition of Kaizen
Kaizen is the practice of continuous
improvement. Kaizen was originally introduced to the West by Masaaki Imai in his book Kaizen: The Key to Japan’s
Competitive Success in 1986. Today kaizen is recognized worldwide as an
important pillar of an organization’s long-term competitive strategy. Kaizen is continuous improvement that is based on certain guiding principles:
- Good processes bring good results
- Go see for yourself to grasp the current situation
- Speak with data, manage by facts
- Take action to contain and correct root causes of problems
- Work as a team
- Kaizen is everybody’s business
- And much more!
One of the most notable features of
kaizen is that big results come from many small changes accumulated over time.
However this has been misunderstood to mean that kaizen equals small changes.
In fact, kaizen means everyone involved in making improvements. While the
majority of changes may be small, the greatest impact may be kaizens that are
led by senior management as transformational projects, or by cross-functional
teams as kaizen
events.
![Kaizen Word Picture](file:///C:\Users\DEWAPP~1\AppData\Local\Temp\msohtmlclip1\01\clip_image002.jpg)
ZEN =
GOOD
"CHANGE FOR THE
BETTER"
Kaizen = Continuous Improvements
...by Everybody!
Everyday! Everywhere!
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