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  2. Lean thinking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lean_thinking

    Lean thinking is a management framework made up of a philosophy, practices and principles which aim to help practitioners improve efficiency and the quality of work. Lean thinking encourages whole organisation participation. The goal is to organise human activities to deliver more benefits to society and value to individuals while eliminating ...

  3. Lean enterprise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lean_enterprise

    Lean enterprise is a practice focused on value creation for the end customer with minimal waste and processes. [4] The term has historically been associated with lean manufacturing and Six Sigma (or Lean Six Sigma) due to lean principles being popularized by Toyota in the automobile manufacturing industry and subsequently the electronics and internet software industries.

  4. Lean project management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lean_project_management

    Lean Project Management applies the five principles of lean thinking to project management. [4] "Lean" is a systematic method for the elimination of waste ("Muda") within a manufacturing system. Lean also takes into account waste created through overburden ("Muri") and waste created through unevenness in work loads ("Mura"). Working from the ...

  5. The Toyota Way - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Toyota_Way

    The principles of the Toyota Way are divided into the two broad categories of continuous improvement and respect for human resources. [7] [8] [9] The standards for constant improvement include directives to set up a long-term vision, to engage in a step-by-step approach to challenges, to search for the root causes of problems, and to engage in ongoing innovation.

  6. Lean higher education - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lean_Higher_Education

    Lean, originally developed at the Toyota Motor Corporation, is a management philosophy that emphasizes "respect for people" and "continuous improvement" as core tenets. Lean encourages employees at all organizational levels to re-imagine services from a customer's point of view, removing process steps that do not add value and emphasizing steps ...

  7. Social system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_system

    Niklas Luhmann was a prominent sociologist and social systems theorist who laid the foundations of modern social system thought. [5] He based his definition of a "social system" on the mass network of communication between people and defined society itself as an "autopoietic" system, meaning a self-referential and self-reliant system that is ...

  8. Three levels of leadership model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_levels_of_leadership...

    "At its heart is the leader's self-awareness, his progress toward self-mastery and technical competence, and his sense of connection with those around him. It's the inner core, the source, of a leader's outer leadership effectiveness." (Scouller, 2011). The idea is that if leaders want to be effective they must work on all three levels in parallel.

  9. Robin Murphy Williams - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Murphy_Williams

    Robin William's established what he believed encompassed the 9 core values that drove the American individuals in 1970 before adding 3 more in 1975. He presented them in this manner: Equal opportunity, achievement and success, material comfort, activity and work, practicality and efficiency, progress, science, democracy and enterprise and ...