DocumentCode
1529328
Title
Lean: More than a Shop-Floor Fad
Author
Costello, Tom
Author_Institution
UpStreme
Volume
13
Issue
3
fYear
2011
Firstpage
64
Lastpage
63
Abstract
When most business or IT executives hear the term "Lean," they immediately think of shop-floor centric initiatives limited to manufacturing. However, a deeper look at Lean principles reveals opportunities for organizations to optimize their operations, including IT. At its most basic form, Lean focuses on processes in an organization that add value for which a customer will pay. It advocates removing all extraneous processes that don\´t directly contribute to that value stream. The author recently met with Larry Miller, author of Lean Culture: A Leadership Guide (LM Miller Publishing, 2011), to discuss not only how IT can support Lean efforts but also how the Lean philosophy can help CIOs optimize IT operations. Although executives and business leaders are Miller\´s target audience, IT analysts, relation ship managers, business liaisons, change-management teams, and other IT players will quickly spot how the described approach fits in with IT practices. Given that today\´s CIOs have evolved from simple service providers into partners in business-strategy definition and execution, these processes should be useful with or without a formal Lean initiative.
Keywords
business data processing; information technology; lean production; IT operation; IT practice; business-strategy execution; lean philosophy; lean principle; organization; shop-floor; Best practices; Business; Engineering management; Management; Organizations; Production management; Strategic planning;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
IT Professional
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1520-9202
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MITP.2011.45
Filename
5779008
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