The more I talked, the more excited I got - until my little sister called me “an improvement nerd.” I haven’t been called a nerd since I was in my high school orchestra, so it caught me a little off guard. The more I thought about it though, the more I realized that she’s right. I am a proud improvement nerd - we all are here at KaiNexus. Almost everything we do, everything we see, and everything we read - it all screams CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT to us.
I know it’s not just me, because yesterday our co-founder and Chief Product Officer Greg Jacobson emailed me pages from a Disney Princess Adventure book he’s been reading with his three year old daughter. The subject of the email was “Cinderella and Lean.”
Check this out:
In the story, Cinderella has just married Prince Charming and moved into the royal palace. She’s worried that the servants aren’t happy (obviously - if you recall, Cinderella herself was a mistreated servant before she married Prince Charming). When she asked the servants about their jobs, satisfaction, and ideas for improvement, they said only polite, positive things.
Like a manager whose employees feel intimidated and powerless to enact change.
To find out if they were really happy, Cinderella disguised herself as a servant and went out to help them with their work and see things from their perspective.
Like a gemba walk - leaving the office to go out into the ranks.
In working alongside the servants, Cinderella learned that the staff had lots of ideas for ways to make their jobs easier, increase their satisfaction, eliminate waste, and help the royal family better. She asked for their ideas and respected their authority as front line workers.
Then, Cinderella reported back to the royal family (her management team), who empowered the servants to make the improvements they’d suggested while she was on her gemba walk.
Like a leader of a true culture of continuous improvement.
See? The parallels here are striking, and I don’t think you have to be a continuous improvement nerd to see it. This Disney story about a rags-to-riches princess is promoting the value of:
Disney princesses get a bad rap these days for influencing little girls to have unrealistic expectations for themselves and others. Call me a continuous improvement nerd if you must, but the Cinderella in this story is exactly the kind of leader I want my daughter to grow up to be - a lean practitioner.
To learn more about what you as a leader should be doing to create a culture of continuous improvement in your own organization, check out our free upcoming webinar.
In this webinar, you'll learn how to: