Value Stream Mapping

and Toyota Kata

3.

Kata Creates

Culture

5.

The TK

Starter Kata

Kata_Creates_Culture.html
The_TK_Starter_Kata.html

Value Stream Mapping

Supporting Materials

Supporting_Materials.html

Extras

Extras.html

1.

Improvement Kata

The_Improvement_Kata.html

Challenge

Challenge.html

2.

Coaching

Kata

The_Coaching_Kata.html

4.

Getting

Started

Getting_Started.html

TOYOTA

KATA

The

Improvement

Kata Exercise

The_IK_Exercise.html
Homepage.html
 

Learning to See (which I co-authored with John Shook

and Jim Womack), is a popular instruction manual

for Value Stream Mapping (VSM). Since the book’s

publication in 1999, VSM has become the tool for

analyzing & designing work flows at the door-to-door

system level.


But what do you do once you have a future state map

with your design for an improved value stream? That’s

where Toyota Kata comes in and helps you turn what

your map depicts into reality. VSM provides a sense

of direction ... Toyota Kata gets you there.


Toyota Kata Culture (TKC) is my follow-on publication to Learning to See, picking up

where LTS left off. The two books go together as a set.


Unlike improving a single process, a value stream design involves several departments

and processes, and many people. Essentially you are trying to deploy a strategy you’ve

designed. Based on real cases, the TKC book shows you how TK-practicing organizations

coordinate and align that effort, and sharpen their scientific-thinking skills at the same time.


For a quick overview of TKC, click here to read the Preface -->


Click through the SlideShare below to learn about using value stream mapping

together with Toyota Kata. Click the icon to download the PowerPoint slides. -->

VSM = Design. TK = How to Deploy That Design.