Mark,
It is a journey, a hard one at that, so it is all the more important to start out in the right direction.
Here is my hard won experience. When I was but starting out as a Lean Consultant, I used to be quite flexible and let the client keep some of their old command and control measures, let them do a little benchmarking etc. But now I don't permit any of that stuff. Why? Because the most crucial change is the change in thinking. The must unlearn what they know so that they are totally open to doing the counter-intuitive things that Lean will lead them to. How do you get them to unlearn? You give them things to do. What things? Depends on the situation. Not much help to you perhaps, but letting them off the hook will doom the initiative to mediocrity. You should have seen the my first couple of contracts. It pains me to think.
I used a personal trainer for a few months to get me ready for a football tournament in Norway a couple of years back. He was an utter git from head to toe. He never let me off the hook, not once. I f**king hated that bloke. But when I got to Norway I was by far the fittest I have ever been, before or since.
The thing is what do you learn from benchmarking? Nothing that is going to help you improve your own system. The only relative measure is: Are we giving value to the customer quicker/better than we did before? The only source of answers to the question of how to improve are in your own system, therefore benchmarking doesn't help. |