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This description defines which one of those concepts? "Inducing lasting excellence and continuous improvement one small step at a time"

A. Six Sigma

B. Fishbone

C. Kaizen

D. TQM

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Question ajoutée par Nuridin Islam Diab , Training Manager , Bbusinesss LLE
Date de publication: 2016/04/07
Ghada Eweda
par Ghada Eweda , Medical sales hospital representative , Pfizer pharmaceutical Plc.

The correct answwee is C. Kaizen

ACHMAD SURJANI
par ACHMAD SURJANI , General Manager Operations , Sinar Jaya Group Ltd

A planning process involves the group:

  • Developing a sense of team such that the group can engage in honest and respectful dialogue with the goal of being nimble and increasing effectiveness and efficiency.
  • Understanding the group’s mission and vision and how it fits into the whole of Cornell.
  • Understanding the environment in which the group works and how that environment impacts their work.
  • Understanding their stakeholders’/decision-makers’ (Cornell Board of Trustees, president, provost, vice presidents, deans, directors, co-workers, and customers) expectations, needs, and wants.
  • Understanding how the group engaged in the goal alignment is perceived by key stakeholders/decision makers, in order to use that information to inform future continuous improvement. This information is often gathered from customers/clients (individuals to whom the service is exchanged), employees (the group engaged in the goal alignment effort), and owners/administrators/key decision-makers (president, provost, vice presidents, deans, directors to whom the group reports) using reliable processes and metrics to determine future directions and possibilities.

Various frameworks can be applied when striving to achieve excellence. One example that has been developed and applied at Cornell is the Stakeholder Alignment Model, which focuses on: 

  • Developing the organization by developing each individual;
  • Engaging all employees in actively managing their own performance and professional development; 
  • Providing supervisors and managers with resources and tools to create and develop  processes that work for their staff; and
  • Consciously focusing on continuous improvement.

Leaders at Cornell are leaders of organizational change. Leaders can expect to be called upon to consider the processes and tools available to make changes at an organizational level, and will strive to develop best practices that result in excellence for individuals, units, and the university. A leader can only know if something is a best practice if the change is measured. That makes it possible to determine if that practice resulted in continuous improvement. Hence, strategic planning at the level of the president and provost goes hand-in-hand with change leadership, which includes goal alignment, process improvement, implementation and continuous improvement.

A first step is to know where the university is going and why (strategic planning at the university level). Once senior leaders have determined the strategic plan, it is important for each unit to align their goals to that plan and determine if current processes and/or behaviors are effective and efficient. If they are not, the goal of the change leadership is to creatively and systematically create new processes, procedures, or structures that help individuals and groups be more effective. Once changes are identified, it is important to consider the impact that making the change will have to the organization and individual employees: “What will the change mean for those who are responsible, those who are accountable, those who are impacted? How will it alter work flow and work processes? What needs to be considered in terms of technology, individuals, and team dynamics?”

Continuous Improvement for Excellence as a Method to Measure Progress

Cornell’s Continuous Improvement for Excellence (CIE) is a systematic methodology that provides tools to help enhance existing programs and processes, improve effectiveness, foster a collaborative work environment, and tap the expertise of employees.

Our focus on continuous improvement is built on:

  • Knowledgeable and ever-developing leadership at all levels, with leaders who understand and are committed to Cornell’s mission of supporting and furthering education, research, and community outreach.
  • Understanding one’s stakeholders and aligning and prioritizing their wants and needs by using effective processes and service approaches. Stakeholder alignment involves aligning the various needs and wants of key customers, employees, and owner/administrators with you own work and service capabilities so that the priorities of all three kinds of stakeholders are met.
  • Open and honest team dialogue, effectiveness, and decision making that lead to quality improvements and a common understanding of systems and processes.
  • Measuring what matters and developing quantifiable data and consistent values for decision-making.
  • Conceptual and applicable links to strategic planning, unit, department, and individual measurable goals.

Continuous Improvement for Excellence Tools

ODFS uses a variety of individual, supervisor, manager, and team or group measurement tools and processes, and will help you custom-design any survey or tool to best meet your needs. Tools we have readily available are below. If a tool is underlined, click on it to see a sample web version.

360-Degree Feedback  

Climate Check

Customer Survey Examples: (Customer surveys are customized to the group)

Supervisor and Team Assessments:

Process Mapping

  • The appropriate individuals work together to define the current process, look for efficiencies, and map out, vet, revise, and implement the new process.

مها شرف
par مها شرف , معلمة لغة عربية , وزارة التربية السورية

I agree with professional answers, thanks for the invitation. 

Omar Saad Ibrahem Alhamadani
par Omar Saad Ibrahem Alhamadani , Snr. HR & Finance Officer , Sarri Zawetta Company

Thanks

Answer is C) Kaizen

sameer abdul wahab alfaddagh
par sameer abdul wahab alfaddagh , عضو هيئة تدريس , جامعة دلمون

Kaizen Japanese for "improvement." When used in the business sense and applied to the workplace, kaizen refers to activities that continuously improve all functions and involve all employees from the CEO to the assembly line workers. It also applies to processes, such as purchasing and logistics, that cross organizational boundaries into the supply chain. It has been applied in healthcare, psychotherapylife-coaching, government, banking, and other industries.

Mohammed Azmathullah
par Mohammed Azmathullah , customer support specialist , Rippling

Kaizen is the answer. It's a Sino-Japanese term which simply means change for better.

Sathish Prabhu.V
par Sathish Prabhu.V , Manager - Operations & Process Improvement , Revolution Valves

Right answer is Kaizen, small sustained improvement. Many of such improvements will lead to 10X improvements

Rami Assaf
par Rami Assaf , Plant Manager , Al Manaseer group

Thanks for invitation

I amagreeing with my colleague’s answer CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC

Ahmed Mohamed Ayesh Sarkhi
par Ahmed Mohamed Ayesh Sarkhi , Shared Services Supervisor , Saudi Musheera Co. Ltd.

C. Kaizen

is my choice

      .

Gurjit Singh
par Gurjit Singh , Global Sales and Business Development Manager- Actively looking for change , Saudi Rubber Products Co.

Answer.............................................Kaizen

Mohammad Mohammad Ahmed El-Safty
par Mohammad Mohammad Ahmed El-Safty , مشرف تدريب وتطوير , شركة ميداس للتجارة العامة والمقاولات

KAIZEN: The Small-Step Step Solution for You and Your Company

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