Lean Blog Interviews - Healthcare, Manufacturing, Business, and Leadership
Business:Management
Episode page with transcript and more
My guest for Episode #500 of the Lean Blog Interviews Podcast is me, your usual host Mark Graban. Today, I'm mixing up the format with a solo episode that celebrates 500 episodes over almost 18 years.
I'll share some of the origin story and history of the podcast. You'll hear clips from Episode 1 (with Norm Bodek) and Episode 50 (where Jamie Flinchbaugh asked me about getting started). You'll also hear a clip from a recent conversation where Barry McCarthy, of AME Australia, asked me about persisting with podcasting all these years.
Thanks for listening, whether this is your first time, you've listened to them all, or somewhere in between!
The podcast is brought to you by Stiles Associates, the premier executive search firm specializing in the placement of Lean Transformation executives. With a track record of success spanning over 30 years, it's been the trusted partner for the manufacturing, private equity, and healthcare sectors. Learn more.
This podcast is part of the #LeanCommunicators network.
Notes and Highlights:Marc Rouppe van der Voort, Lean in Dutch Healthcare
Katie Anderson on Lean Collaboration Within Healthcare and Beyond
Andrea Hardaway, Making Metrics Matter
Art Smalley, “Four Types of Problems”
Davis Balestracci on “Data Sanity”
Samuel Selay's Reflections on Lean
Mark Hamel on "Lean Math" and People, Too
Skip Steward on Deming, Wheeler, Metrics, and More
Karen Martin on "Clarity First" and More
Marcus Hammarberg, How Lean & Kanban...
Patricia Morrill, “The Perils of Uncoordinated Care”
Jamie Flinchbaugh Interviews Mark Graban
Bob Maurer, Ph.D. on "Mastering Fear"
Skip Steward & Brandon Brown, on TWI & Kata in Healthc
Audiobook Excerpt of "Measures of Success"
Jeff Hunter on "Patient-Centered Strategy"
Jess Orr, Lessons from Toyota and Beyond
Steve Shortell, The Impact of Lean on Healthcare - Center for Lean Engagement and Research (CLEAR)
David Meier, A Toyota Guy on Making Bourbon with a Continuous Improvement Flavor
Mike Grogan, Personal Lean and Lessons Learned