What Continuous Improvement Is (and How to Use It) process.st/continuous-improvement April 6, 2018
Ben Mulholland April 6, 2018
No process is perfect; there’s always room to improve. Unfortunately, many teams have no way to identify, test, and deploy the changes they make, meaning each tweak is a roll of the dice. The savings can be massive, but you need a continuous improvement program to make sure that the changes you make won’t make your operations a whole lot harder. “1 in 10 improvements save money… [each saving, on average,] $31,043 in its first year of implementation. 1 in 4 improvements save time… [each saving, on average,] 270 hours in its first year of implementation.” – KaiNexus, The ROI of Continuous Improvement Most successful changes will also make your employee’s jobs easier (or more pleasant) to perform. You’ll be saving time and money, but you’ll also be getting far better value out of your current efforts and operations. However, I’m getting ahead of myself. Let’s start from the top.
What is continuous improvement? 1/8