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Six Sigma and Workout
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Ask successful Six Sigma Deployment Leaders, or experienced Black Belts, and they will usually report that "change management" is the most challenging aspect of deploying Six Sigma. For most practitioners, change management is the "black art" of Six Sigma deployment: What is change management? And how can you convert the volumes of change management theory into practical, easily applied strategies for accelerating the culture change process so critical to sustained Six Sigma success?
A major piece of the Six Sigma change management puzzle is determining how to create broader ownership for Six Sigma, without diluting the rigor of the methodology. The starting point for solving the ownership problem is recognizing that Six Sigma is a relatively "low engagement" strategy to begin with. It relies on an elite core of highly trained Black Belts, and to a lesser extent Green Belts, to do the heavy lifting of driving change through the organization.
Investing in the development of a relatively small cadre of expert, fulltime problem solvers is a cornerstone for Six Sigma success and has paid big dividends in many companies willing to make the commitment. But this strategy comes with a definite risk - the evolution of a "we/they" caste system within organizations between those deeply involved in Six Sigma (the Belts) and those (the Non-Belts) mostly relegated to the sidelines.
The consequences of this "Non-Belt participation gap," that typically surface 12 - 18 months into Six Sigma Deployment, include:
In many successful deployments, this change management issue has been dealt with by brute force. Resistance to change is overcome through the exercise of command and control power by top executives who feel Six Sigma is important enough that its implementation should be simply mandated. Another change management strategy has been to saturate the organization with training and build Belt certification into the criteria for promotion. Both of these strategies are less than optimal and have negative consequences - in fact, over time both feed the development of the "we/they" caste system mentioned above. They lead to the question of how to break down internal resistance in some other way. After all, not every company looking to benefit from Six Sigma can expect top executives to support the initiative by taking it on as a personal crusade or by betting the company's future on its success.
One solution is the integration of Workout tools and techniques first used by GE to create an "empowered" culture. Workout tools were largely credited as a critical accelerator of GE's Six Sigma effort. Among Workout's key synergy with Six Sigma is the focus on unleashing the know-how of those closest to the work. In other words, Workout typically relies for much of its power on precisely the group of employees who often receive only a cursory exposure to Six Sigma tools and concepts.
The Evolution of Workout
Workout as a business improvement methodology was birthed at GE under Jack Welch in response to failed TQM efforts and Welch's passion to accelerate change and transform GE's bureaucratic culture. The first Workout efforts at GE were built on the construct of the "Town Hall Meeting" - one to three-day gatherings of organization stakeholders designed to discuss and take action on major issues.
The big differences between this first generation of Workout version and TQM and other continuous improvement methodologies were striking, including:
Based on GE's success, a number of companies and consultants built on and steadily improved the Workout concept. The most recent and notable company implementing Workout principles is General Motors, whose "Go Fast!" program has reportedly saved the company millions of dollars since its introduction in 2000. The strengths of Go Fast! are its tight structure, packaging and dedicated cadre of internal coaches. This Workout innovation has armed GM with a tool for involving thousands of employees in a controlled empowerment exercise.
Other organizations, including IMC Global and Standard Register, have directly integrated Six Sigma Workout to speed solution implementation on DMAIC projects and capture more quick-win gains. Once some of the more complex problems are dissected through data analysis, IMC's Black Belts engage frontline employees using Workout idea generation, prioritization and action plan development techniques to bring more creativity and ownership to solution development and implementation.
By combining Six Sigma with Workout tools, IMC Global has engaged 450 employees and managers on Workout teams to accelerate solution implementation. IMC attributes more than $3.5 million in savings to the specific contributions made by the Workout groups. At Standard Register, Workout teams provide an off ramp for projects that do not require the rigor of heavy statistical analysis but benefit from structured participation by employees closest to the problem.
Combining the Science and Psychology of Change
One of the strengths of the Six Sigma movement appears to be its ability to absorb (although sometimes very slowly) new ideas and approaches. The integration of Lean Process Design into Six Sigma initiatives is a prime example of how a good system can get better, when practitioners with differing perspectives get together.
The combination of Workout and Six Sigma is gaining traction as organizations begin to look at addressing the change management challenges of a Six Sigma deployment head-on. Six Sigma brings an objective, fact-based approach to making decisions about how to improve critical business processes. It relies on the weight of logic and data analysis to break through the technical barriers to change. Workout, at its core, is a psychological approach to change that taps universal drivers of human behavior: The desire to be listened to and valued; to be supported from those in power; and, to be rewarded for making things better.
While Six Sigma projects may be able to meet the long-term psychological needs for the Black and Green Belts, it's nearly impossible to do so fast enough to meet the expectations and psychological needs of Non-Belts. This is particularly true for those in knowledge worker roles and "high touch" work environments.
For these managers and employees, who after all, make up a large chunk of the nation's workforce, the real "currency" of change is the opportunity to quickly put their ideas into action to improve results for their internal and external customers and make a difference in daily work life. Workout provides the means to close the engagement gap on Six Sigma initiatives by giving all employees a structured format for converting ideas into action and in doing so accelerates short-term results and reduces the cycle time of achieving "critical mass" in the evolution of a Six Sigma Culture.
Keys to Successful Integration
Integrating Six Sigma and Workout is not difficult, but it does require effective positioning and assignment of roles and responsibilities. The following are guidelines for successful integration:
For companies already committed to Six Sigma, the addition of Workout to their ongoing deployment strategy can add 30 percent or more to their savings scorecard and greatly expand employee participation. For companies not ready to invest in Six Sigma, Workout is a logical on-ramp for clearing the path of low-hanging fruit and for helping employees become confident about making change happen at "controlled" speed.
About The Author
Rick Tucci is president of Leap Technologies and developer of the Action Workout® System, the most advanced generation of Workout tools available. Leap Technologies has recently introduced Six Sigma® Workout® designed specifically for integration with Six Sigma deployments. For more information visit http://www.sixsigmaworkout.com. To comment on or discuss this article, please email Rick Tucci at rtucci@actionworkout.com.
Six Sigma is a registered trademark of Motorola, Inc.
Workout is a registered trademark of Leap Technologies, Inc.
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