The Conversational Sweetspot

Craig Weber offers excellent advice and material on the most basic way of creating success, our conversations. An excerpt from the Business901 podcast, Working Conversations; We don’t focus on the conversations much, partly because we lack the frameworks. We’ve got a lot of good frameworks and strategies out there for how to structure an organization, Read More …

Scenario Thinking the Next Big Thing

In the past few months, I have submersed myself into several different areas. One of them being Scenario Planning or Thinking. I was honored to have George Wright, co-author of Scenario Thinking: Practical Approaches to the Future. The book is an innovative guide to new methods in scenario thinking. The book focuses on the demonstration Read More …

Lean Service Design Workbook

Don’t try to refine your ideas to soon. You want just enough detail to move to the next step. You may even want to use independent teams with different focus points such as one with a functional slant and another with a social slant. One that aims at self-service while another without technology. Conflict and Read More …

EDCA for Lean Service Design

As you start in EDCA, remember that the User/Customer is at the center of your universe. You have to continue improving and earning the right to remain within their sphere of influence. Most of us design services around how we think, not how the customer thinks. We have this idea that we know what is Read More …

PDCA for Lean Service Design

The Deming Cycle or The Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) model is a proven framework for implementing continuous quality improvement. It originated in the 1920s with Walter A. Shewhart. These four steps provide the framework for continuous improvement. The PDCA cycle basically starts with a plan and ends with an action in accordance with the information learned during Read More …

SDCA for Lean Service Design

A perspective on Standard Work from Steve Bell (Steve and his partner Mike Orzen later published Lean IT: Enabling and Sustaining Your Lean Transformation): But when you get right down to it the principles of Lean are the same. It’s about collaborative learning. It’s about speed. It’s about quality. It’s about waste reduction. Those basic Read More …