Recent attendees locations and industries

June 22, 2011 by Six Sigma Training  
Filed under Six Sigma News

Troy Banking & Securities
Dorchester
Saint Louis High Tech – ISP
East Windsor Banking & Securities
Pori Consulting
Bangalore Support Outsourcing
grapevine Hospital, Clinic, Doctor Office
Rochester Hills Other
NY Advertising/Marketing/PR
Houston Hospitality, Travel, Tourism
Perth Energy, Chemical, Utilities
Mumbai
Phoenix Hospitality, Travel, Tourism
Roswell Other
Giza Manufacturing
Dubai Manufacturing
Columbus, Ohio Insurance
allen Telecommunications
Pompano Beach Banking & Securities
la jolla Medical, Pharma, Biotech
austin
Singapore Manufacturing
Cairo Consulting
littleton Consulting
Chennai Other
manchester Consulting
Chicago Other
RSM Banking & Securities
Houston Other
Dongguan Telecommunications
Cincinnati Consulting
sf Manufacturing
Atlanta Advertising/Marketing/PR
Woodstock, IL Manufacturing
Dorchester
Caracas Other
Fort McMurray Energy, Chemical, Utilities
Chicago
Chicago
Dallas Energy, Chemical, Utilities
crestwood
Champaign Education
Clark Education
Frankfurt am Main Consulting
Paradise Other
Dansville Other
Minneapolis Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Doha VAR/Systems Integrator
chicago Consulting
Marietta High Tech – Other
Chicago Consulting
St. Louis Accounting
Tulsa Manufacturing
Lantana Retail
Chicago Financial Services – Other
cranberry township Software – Healthcare
Cambridge, MA High Tech – Other
Garland
whitby Support Outsourcing
Alpharetta
Houston High Tech – Hardware
Farmington Hills
Ottawa Education
Sugar Grove Consulting

locations and industries of recent attendees

June 12, 2011 by Six Sigma Training  
Filed under Six Sigma News

Mohali Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Euless Other
Hurstville Financial Services – Other
Fort Lauderdale, Florida Manufacturing
Buffalo Grove Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Bellevue Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Wylie Consulting
Austin Medical, Pharma, Biotech
placentia Financial Services – Other
Bernardsville Software – Healthcare
Lima Manufacturing
West Chester Consulting
Placentia Financial Services – Other
New York Insurance
Katy High Tech – Other
Highlands Ranch Consulting
Orlando Hospital, Clinic, Doctor Office
Mesa Financial Services – Other
Laguna Niguel Manufacturing
Dallas / Fort Worth Area Consulting
Valley Manufacturing
Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Eastom Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Fairfax Retail
Phoenix Hospital, Clinic, Doctor Office
Austin Software – Other
Aurora Consulting
Carrollton Retail
Litchfield Manufacturing
London Financial Services – Other
Fort Worth
Alexander City
cairo Education
Sachse Advertising/Marketing/PR
North Barrington Financial Services – Other
chennai Call Center Outsourcing
Lithonia Manufacturing
Spokane Hospital, Clinic, Doctor Office
Dallas
Saint Petersburg
Ft lauderdale Insurance
San Diego Telecommunications
Colorado Springs Support Outsourcing
Inglewood Accounting
West Hartford Accounting
Charlotte Transportation & Distribution
Bogota Medical, Pharma, Biotech
New Milford Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Edina Other
cherry hill Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Petaluma Insurance
Denver Financial Services – Other
Montreal Consulting
Barnsley Other
Albuquerque Manufacturing
Brandon Legal
Saint clair shores Financial Services – Other
Plano Consulting
Medical, Pharma, Biotech
barrington
Laguna Niguel Hospital, Clinic, Doctor Office
Maywood Telecommunications
Ottawa Telecommunications
Boynton Beach Other
New castle
Alpharetta Consulting
Banking & Securities
Tempe Manufacturing
Chicago High Tech – Other
Dallas High Tech – Hardware
Morrow Transportation & Distribution
Acton, MA Manufacturing
Bolingbrook Manufacturing
Dubai Software – Other
Parrish Consulting
Rockwall Manufacturing
Dallas Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Clark, NJ Software – Other
Chicago Telecommunications
Baldwin Legal
Santa Clarita Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Transportation & Distribution
Toms River Medical, Pharma, Biotech
Tucson Aerospace & Defense
Lake in the Hills
Alameda High Tech – Other
gold canyon AZ Telecommunications
Cerritos Accounting
Dallas Financial Services – Other
San Diego
Hollywool
Hollywood Medical, Pharma, Biotech
W Simsbury Consulting
orlando Medical, Pharma, Biotech
West Orange Medical, Pharma, Biotech

Defining Lean Six Sigma to the frustrated and questioning public

October 24, 2010 by Six Sigma Training  
Filed under Six Sigma News

At a recent networking event I was presented with not one, but two people who were challengers of Lean Six Sigma.  Initially, I was taken aback:  how can you NOT be a supporter of a proven methodology that increases efficiency and saves money?   I, a Lean Six Sigma Black Belt, decided to ride in on my intellectual white horse to educate these people and bring them into the fold. 

                The first person told me flat out, “I am not a fan of Lean Six Sigma.”  Hmmm.  When I questioned him, he explained to me that he was a busy program manager, and a superior manager enlisted him to transform the organization with LSS processes, and to compose a training plan to educate the whole company.  This person was anointed as the LSS Champion for his organization, and yet had never taken an LSS class in the first place.  He also told me about how difficult it was to get company approval for the changes he was instructed to make.  As I peeled away the layers of his frustration, I questioned him, “Is it Lean Six Sigma you don’t like, or is it the internal politics of your company?”  BINGO.  I hit the nail on the head.  Lean Six Sigma wasn’t the problem, it was the scapegoat.  Any LSS practitioner could read this paragraph and understand that the approach for instituting Lean Six Sigma in that organization was not one that was particularly well thought out.  Score one for me!  I successfully defended Lean Six Sigma to the first nay-sayer I encountered.  That was easy!  I am awesome at this!

                The second interaction I had with a fellow networker that night would not be so easy.  He had had some exposure to Lean Six Sigma and knew it was process-driven, and occasionally, process-heavy.  He asked me if the emphasis on process stifled innovation.  I wasn’t stumped, but I was definitely pensive….I know that Lean Six Sigma optimizes current processes and current results.  Design for Six Sigma (a philosophy applied at many manufacturing enterprises) attempts to lay strong ground work before new processes or projects begin…but could it really stifle innovation?? 

                This colleague sent me a link to a speech given by professional business analyst Simon Wardley at the last O’Reilly OSCON (Open Source Convention)*.  The speaker had some excellent points about business and processes.  The core of his discussion was that any company has a mass of activities, all at different stages of their lifecycles.  Activities at the beginning of their lifecycle are chaotic (dynamic, uncertain), eventually are transitioned to a phase of linear behavior (repeatable, standardized, predictable).   He explained that today’s new, chaotic activities [innovations] are the profit center of the future…today’s linear activities provide profit for today.   I was completely on board with the speaker up to this point.

                The speaker touts the “fantastic” (his quote) impact on Lean Six Sigma on the linear activities:  these activities are in fact repeatable, and standard.  I agree, as most case studies we discuss in our classes feature processes today, products made today, measurable results for today.  The speaker then says, bluntly, that , “Six Sigma absolutely sucks when you try to manage innovation because it seeks to reduce variation.”      I went back and listened to this sentence no less than three times.  Do you see a word missing in this sentence?  I do, and it made all the difference. 

                I suppose the speaker has a point (albeit crass) that overlaying a philosophy that reduces variation atop of this trial-and-error stage of activities would be counter-intuitive.  However, if the speaker led his sentence with the word LEAN, it would have made his argument  completely baseless.  Lean is the corollary, the partner, the precursor to Six Sigma.  The words are not synonyms.  Together, positive results can be achieved in chaotic AND linear activities. 

                Lean is a separate beast  from Six Sigma, as its focus is waste reduction (not reducing variance).  Lean comes first in verbiage and business improvement.  Lean addresses what we call “low hanging fruit” and can clear the way of extraneous waste to create a healthy environment for innovation and growth. 

                Perhaps if the speaker understood Lean and its partnership with Six Sigma, he wouldn’t have been so eager to throw the whole philosophy down the drain.  By his example, Six Sigma’s only utilization is at one end of the business lifecycle.    Hundreds of powerful companies wouldn’t have woven Lean Six Sigma practices into every facet of their corporate cloth if it was only useful in one part of business.  Understanding and correctly using the tools of Lean and Six Sigma (which was lacked by the speaker) and having corporate support and participation (lacking in the first networkers’ company) are critical to success.   Wrongly defined or mistakenly applied, though, and these tools earn a poor reputation….and that is just too bad. 

*Link to speech:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Oyf4vvJyy4&start=12:58

Forms and Docs

June 22, 2009 by Six Sigma Training  
Filed under Six Sigma News

Jack Welch on 6 Sigma

June 20, 2009 by Six Sigma Training  
Filed under Six Sigma News

Jack Welsh Six Sigma | Movies & TV | SPIKE.com