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This book focuses on the human side of organizational culture. The
authors approach organizational culture from the perspective of
alignment to mission, vision, and values. Using a Lean Six Sigma
structure, the sequence of chapters begins with the organization
and its structure, then drills through strategic, operational, and
tactical levels of process and behavior which establish and grow
the overall culture of the organization over time. The book begins
with foundational principles of organization, through the necessity
of aligning processes and systems to mission and vision,
assessment, gap analysis for improvement, prioritization, and
chapters on qualitative and quantitative approaches for reducing
variation and improving systems and behavior. Through this book,
readers will: -- Learn the foundation and core concepts of the
organization -- Discover the “right” focus of shifting the
culture of the organization -- Recognize the building blocks of
organizational culture and how to integrate them into a successful,
customer-focused system of interconnected processes -- Focus on
people as drivers of technology, rather than the reverse -- Explore
techniques to address the challenges and concerns of today’s
training and deployment for organizational performance excellence
-- Use the chapters as short discussions or training workshops for
either internal education or public/private technical education.
This book focuses on the human side of organizational culture. The
authors approach organizational culture from the perspective of
alignment to mission, vision, and values. Using a Lean Six Sigma
structure, the sequence of chapters begins with the organization
and its structure, then drills through strategic, operational, and
tactical levels of process and behavior which establish and grow
the overall culture of the organization over time. The book begins
with foundational principles of organization, through the necessity
of aligning processes and systems to mission and vision,
assessment, gap analysis for improvement, prioritization, and
chapters on qualitative and quantitative approaches for reducing
variation and improving systems and behavior. Through this book,
readers will: -- Learn the foundation and core concepts of the
organization -- Discover the “right” focus of shifting the
culture of the organization -- Recognize the building blocks of
organizational culture and how to integrate them into a successful,
customer-focused system of interconnected processes -- Focus on
people as drivers of technology, rather than the reverse -- Explore
techniques to address the challenges and concerns of today’s
training and deployment for organizational performance excellence
-- Use the chapters as short discussions or training workshops for
either internal education or public/private technical education.
Sharing Best Practices across industries and functions is an
accepted approach to continuous improvement. The Benchmarking trend
of the 1990s has evolved with the help of competitive analysis,
performance excellence awards, and other corporate recognition
programs into an ongoing documentation of what works. Bob Camp
introduced benchmarking against a Best Practice based on his work
at Xerox in the 1980s. Case studies abound documenting Best
Practice functions and processes. Some case studies use the words
"Best Practice" without evidence that the process, results, or
methods are, indeed, superior. What is missing is a comprehensive
model for assessing and writing a Best Practice that provides
sufficient information to use as an effective benchmark. This book
provides that comprehensive model. Today's consumers expect
products and services to be of high quality, reliable, and
user-friendly. This is the result of years of continuous
improvement and innovation by producers. Although many
organizations strive for excellent results, there is still room for
improvement. Unfortunately, leaders don't always have methods and
tools to measure or assess that degree of excellence. If leaders
could use a tool to discover how good their approaches and methods
are, and how excellent their achieved results are, they could plan
further improvements. The goal is to achieve excellent results. The
tool described in this book guides leaders to achieve that
excellence.
Sharing Best Practices across industries and functions is an
accepted approach to continuous improvement. The Benchmarking trend
of the 1990s has evolved with the help of competitive analysis,
performance excellence awards, and other corporate recognition
programs into an ongoing documentation of what works. Bob Camp
introduced benchmarking against a Best Practice based on his work
at Xerox in the 1980s. Case studies abound documenting Best
Practice functions and processes. Some case studies use the words
"Best Practice" without evidence that the process, results, or
methods are, indeed, superior. What is missing is a comprehensive
model for assessing and writing a Best Practice that provides
sufficient information to use as an effective benchmark. This book
provides that comprehensive model. Today's consumers expect
products and services to be of high quality, reliable, and
user-friendly. This is the result of years of continuous
improvement and innovation by producers. Although many
organizations strive for excellent results, there is still room for
improvement. Unfortunately, leaders don't always have methods and
tools to measure or assess that degree of excellence. If leaders
could use a tool to discover how good their approaches and methods
are, and how excellent their achieved results are, they could plan
further improvements. The goal is to achieve excellent results. The
tool described in this book guides leaders to achieve that
excellence.
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