TAKE OUT ALL THE ‘MUDA’ OUT OF OUR LIVES.
The Taj hotel group had invited
Mr. Masai Imai from Japan to hold a workshop for its staff. The staff was very
skeptical - the hotel is doing excellent business, this person from Japan has
no exposure to hotel industry - what exactly is he going to teach? But
everybody gathered as planned for the workshop in the conference hall sharp at
9 am.
Mr. Masai was introduced to them -
a not so impressive personality, nor the English all that good; spoke as if he
was first formulating each sentence in Japanese and then translating it into
rather clumsy English. "Good
morning! Let's start work. I am told this is a 'workshop'; but I see neither 'work' nor 'shop'. So let's proceed where work is happening. Let's start with the first
room on the first floor."
Mr. Masai, followed by the senior
management, the participants, the video camera crew trouped out of the
conference room and proceeded to the destination. That happened to be the
laundry room of the hotel. Mr. Masai entered the room and stood at the window,
"beautiful view!" he said. The staff knew it; they need not invite a
Japanese consultant to tell them this! "A room with such a beautiful
view is being wasted as a laundry room. Shift the laundry to the basement and
convert this into a guest room."
Aa Haa! Now nobody had ever
thought about that! The manager said, "Yes, it can be done." "Then
let's do it," Mr. Masai said.
"Yes sir, I will make a note
of this and we will include it in the report on the workshop that will be
prepared," said the Manager.
"Excuse me, but there is
nothing to note down in this. Let's just do it, just now," Mr. Masai. "Just
now?" Manager
"Yes, decide on a room on the
ground floor/basement and shift the stuff out of this room right away. It
should take a couple of hours, right?" asked Mr. Masai. "Yes," said
the manager. "Let's come back here just before lunch. By then all this
stuff will have got shifted out and the room must be ready with the carpets,
furniture etc. and from today you can start earning the few thousand that you
charge your customers for a night." "Ok, Sir." The manager had
no option.
The next destination was the
pantry. The group entered. At the entrance were two huge sinks full of plates
to be washed. Mr. Masai removed his jacket and started washing the plates. "Sir, Please, what are you doing?"
the manager didn't know what to say and what to do. "Why, I am washing the
plates", Mr. Masai. "But sir, there is staff here to do that," manager said. Mr. Masai continued washing,
"I think sink is for washing plates, there are stands here to keep the
plates and the plates should go into the stands." All the officials
wondered - did they require a consultant to tell them this?
After finishing the job, Mr. Masai
asked, "How many plates do you have?” "Plenty, so that there should
never be any shortage." answered the Manager.
Mr. Masai said, "We have a
word in Japanese -'Muda'. Muda means delay, Muda means unnecessary spending.
One lesson to be learned in this workshop is to avoid both. If you have plenty
of plates, there will be delay in cleaning them up. The first step to correct
this situation is to remove all the excess plates." "Yes, we will say
this in the report." Manager. "No, wasting our time in writing the
report is again an instance of 'Muda'. We must pack the extra plates in a box
right away and send these to whichever other section of Taj requires these.
Throughout the workshop now we will find out where all we find this 'Muda'
hidden."
And then at every spot and
session, the staff eagerly awaited to find out Muda and learn how to avoid it. On
the last day, Mr. Masai told a story.
"A Japanese and an American,
both fond of hunting, met in a jungle. They entered deep jungle and suddenly
realized that they had run out of bullets. Just then they heard a lion roaring.
Both started running. But the Japanese took a short break to put on his sports
shoes. The American said, "What are you doing? We must first get to
the car." The Japanese responded, "No. I only have to ensure that I
remain ahead of you." All the participants engrossed in listening to the
story, realized suddenly that the lion would stop after getting his victim!
"The lesson is: competition
in today's world is so fierce, that it is important to stay ahead of other,
even by just a couple of steps. And you have such a huge and naturally well
endowed country. If you remember to curtail your production expenditure and
give the best quality always, you will be miles ahead as compared to so many
other countries in the world.", concluded Mr. Masai.
It is never late to learn... Let
us take out all the MUDA out of our lives!
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