Posts Tagged ‘Green’

SPECIAL REPORT: Strategic Recruiting – Executive Leadership for the Lean+Green Revolution

Posted in Adam Zak, Leadership, Lean & Green, Lean Recruiting, Operational Excellence on August 31st, 2009 by LeanThinker – Comments Off

Recruiting Strategic Leadership for the Lean+Green Revolution, from Adam Zak

With each passing day, recruiting and retaining the right executive talent to lead Lean & Six Sigma efforts and Green & Sustainability initiatives poses a greater challenge…

Today’s most experienced Lean leaders hail from those industrial sectors which were pioneers in continuous improvement.  As still greater numbers of companies venture into lean and Six Sigma, the demand for this expertise is beginning to outweigh overall supply. So where and how do we seek out the best of these individuals?  

On the other hand, the challenge in recruiting the right Green leaders is different, but no less daunting. Can we even agree about what makes an executive Green? How do we deal with imprecise definitions and varying skill sets?  How can we focus on targets which are moving due to the evolving nature of executive backgrounds?

In both situations you’re hiring change agents, quite often the executives who will outline a new vision for your company, and then inspire your team to make that vision a reality.  So what does it take to recruit the right Lean & Green executives for your organization?

In this special report from Adam Zak, a top executive recruiter of Lean, Operational Excellence and Sustainability leaders, you’ll quickly learn:

  • The key principles and goals underlying lean, Six Sigma and green and why these are important to business success.
  • How to identify and differentiate among the various stages through which companies ascend on both their lean and green journeys.
  • How to then determine where your own organization currently stands on these two ladders – and evaluate the lean and green status of the companies from which you want to recruit.
  • How to identify the common characteristics among the lean and green leaders who really stand out from the crowd—the qualities they bring to the table to deliver impact for their companies, and
  • FIVE KEY STRATEGIES you must understand in order to attract and retain the best-in-class Lean and Green Leaders
  • FOUR ideas you can implement TODAY to make your own recruiting processes more lean and green… 

To receive your complimentary copy of this timely special report, please email Adam Zak with:  your name, title, company company phone number and business email address  zak@LeanRecruiter.com

Green Thinking Goes Hand-in-Hand With Lean Thinking

Posted in Adam Zak, Leadership, Lean & Green, Lean Business Strategy, Operational Excellence on July 5th, 2009 by LeanThinker – Comments Off

This unfortunately short 4th of July weekend was none-the-less a great opportunity to see some beautiful fireworks from our vantage point at Old Brookside Farm. Though it did make me ponder if such awesome displays might someday in the future be subject to cap-and-trade restrictions.  And along that same vein, just how “Green” is it to be setting off a few gazillon tons of this stuff all across the country anyway? 

And this thought, in turn, brought some of us to question how and whether or not our manufacturing industries can afford to continue their emphasis on “Green” in light of Mr. Biden’s weekend assessment that maybe we’ve underestimated the degree of this economic downturn.

Perhaps we need to reposition the question and redefine the issue. Green will survive and thrive to the degree that it’s redefined as a business necessity, not just something nice to have around. If we can quickly come to realize that by “doing Green” we are also removing waste (in this sense, non-value added processing, resources, etc.) we are also doing good for the corporate bottom line.

I believe there is already a growing realization that operational excellence principles and practices can offer much in the way of direction to the rapid acceleration toward Green business.

More and more business leaders agree that the shift to Green is necessary and, when done well, can be profitable, and that Lean, Lean Six Sigma, and other Continuous Improvement strategies can be applied to integrated management systems as a framework for the shift to Green. This is bottom-line stuff, and dramatically so, meltdown economy or boom times!

Like Lean, Green can embrace the concept that reducing consumption and preventing waste is more efficient and effective than subsequent mitigation. Global Lean leaders have seen first-hand how continuous improvement across the value stream can capture competitive advantage. Lean’s focus on reducing input cost, waste, and risk; promoting line-level innovation and professional development; and building proactive EHS strategy to mirror the triple bottom line impact Green seeks to generate. Add marketing and social responsibility to the mix and the result is a Lean + Green management strategy that brings PDCA (Plan, Do, Check, Act) principles that many “Green-only” transition managers often don’t realize they’re missing.

If you do “Green” right, with core “Lean” principles and practices as your guiding beacon, you’ll be amazed at the results you can achieve.

This is Adam Zak, and that’s how I see it…

February 12 – Global Sustainability Conference, Executive Level, Chicago

Posted in Adam Zak, Leadership, Lean & Green on January 31st, 2009 by LeanThinker – Comments Off

“The Sustainable Advantage: Who Will Survive and Why”

Developing a strategy that focuses on global sustainability can ensure future productivity and strong consumer confidence – but only if companies do it right. As we move forward into an increasingly interconnected world, companies that have chosen to operate with LEAN & GREEN (sustainable) practices will begin to break ahead of the less innovative. How do you decide where to dedicate your resources to achieve the most return, economically and environmentally, in the future?

The Executives’ Club of Chicago is sponsoring a half-day conference at the Fairmont Hotel in Chicago.  The program begins with a 7:30 breakfast and networking session and runs through lunch, and should conclude around 2:00 PM.  The conference focus is sustainability and I expect to hear quite a lot of information about the connections between GREEN and LEAN.   Contact the Executives’ Club directly for registration, or download the program invitation by clicking on the link below.    As a long-time supporter of the Executives’ Club and frequent participant in their outstanding programs, I encourage you to consider attending. 

“Business Sustainability in a World in Crisis”