Lean Blog Interviews - Healthcare, Manufacturing, Business, and Leadership
Business:Management
Professor at INSEAD, author of "Built to Innovate"
Show notes: https://www.leanblog.org/434
My guest for Episode #434 of the Lean Blog Interviews Podcast is Ben Bensaou. He is an INSEAD professor and author of Built to Innovate: Essential Practices to Wire Innovation into Your Company's DNA.
Ben earned his PhD at the MIT Sloan School of Management, where I was an MBA student. He was part of Jim Womack‘s research team that studied the auto industry and that group coined the term “Lean.”
He's joining us from Kobe, Japan, where he is on sabbatical.
Today, we discuss topics and questions including:
The podcast is sponsored by Stiles Associates, now in their 30th year of business. They are the go-to Lean recruiting firm serving the manufacturing, private equity, and healthcare industries. Learn more.
This podcast is part of the #LeanCommunicators network.
Gerard Ibarra on ”Good Decisions, Better Outcomes”
Jamie Flinchbaugh on ”People Solve Problems” - His New Book
Sonia Singh: From Lean Coach to Leadership Coach, From Consultant to Coach
The Power of Process: Interview With Matt Zayko and Eric Ethington
John Chacon on Continuous Improvement and the Dangers of Paying People to Think
Nick Katko and Mike De Luca Talk About Practicing Lean Accounting
Karyn Ross, Lean and Kind Leadership
John Gallagher, Lean and The Uncommon Leader
Katie Anderson on Breaking the Telling Habit
Balaji Reddie, Founder of the Deming Forum India
Laura Kriska, the First American Woman to Work at Honda HQ in Japan
Brant Cooper on Being ”Disruption Proof” in Pandemic Times & Beyond
BONUS: John Shook, Revisited from 2009 - Managing to Learn and A3 Problem Solving
BONUS: David Meier's "Favorite Mistakes" at Toyota and His Distillery
BONUS: Jamie Flinchbaugh, Revisited from 2006
Ryan McCormack on His “Operational Excellence Mixtapes” & More
BONUS: In Memoriam -- Podcast Guests Who Have Passed Away
Katie Anderson: One Year of "Learning to Lead, Leading to Learn" and the New Audiobook
Revisiting #124: Paul O'Neill on Habitual Excellence and Safety