

Lean Blog Audio: Practical Lean Thinking, Psychological Safety, and Continuous Improvement
Mark Graban
Lean Blog Audio is a short-form podcast featuring audio versions of articles from LeanBlog.org, written, read, and expanded by Mark Graban.
Each episode explores practical Lean thinking, psychological safety, continuous improvement, and leadership—through real-world examples from healthcare, manufacturing, startups, and other complex work environments.
Topics include learning from mistakes, reducing fear and blame, improving systems, and using data thoughtfully through tools like Process Behavior Charts. Episodes often go beyond the original blog post, adding fresh context and reflections.
Each episode explores practical Lean thinking, psychological safety, continuous improvement, and leadership—through real-world examples from healthcare, manufacturing, startups, and other complex work environments.
Topics include learning from mistakes, reducing fear and blame, improving systems, and using data thoughtfully through tools like Process Behavior Charts. Episodes often go beyond the original blog post, adding fresh context and reflections.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 29, 2015 • 10min
You Got Them to Do What? Getting a Hospital to Dedicate
How many times do we hear people say things like“We don’t have time for Lean” or “We don’t have time for Kaizen“? It happens a lot, right? As I’ve said before (and this video) a “lack of time” is a problem to solve... so how did I get hospitals to dedicate staff time for 12 to 16 weeks?
http://leanblog.org/audio108

Nov 18, 2015 • 9min
Maybe We Should Call it "The Many Whys"
The "five" in the "five whys" methodology is not a magic number, be it Lean or Lean Startup approaches.
http://leanblog.org/audio107

Nov 17, 2015 • 10min
You Just Have to Ask Why Five Times?
Why do we need to move beyond "The Five Whys" into a more robust problem solving model for Lean or Lean Startup settings?
http://leanblog.org/audio106

Nov 11, 2015 • 6min
The First Ever Instance of "Lean Doesn't Apply to Us?"
In discussing Lean and working with people in different organizations, I so very often hear things like "we don't build cars" or "we're different." I know I'm not the only one who hears that. The implication is "Lean won't work here, because we're different" in some way. Different country, different industry, different hospital department, different patient or payer mix, etc.

Nov 10, 2015 • 5min
It's Not #Lean to Have Dysfunctional Efficiency Targets
Lean healthcare really is a global movement. Last year, when I went to Japan, we had people in the group from all across Asia, Denmark, Canada, the U.S., and Saudi Arabia. Health systems all around the world need to improve quality and patient safety, reduce waste and create better work environments, reduce waiting times, and get costs under control. These are universal challenges.Thankfully, Lean is helping.
Here's a story from Malaysia that caught my eye: "How assembly lines inspired Asia's hospitals."

Nov 10, 2015 • 4min
Fighting Against "The Way We've Always Done It"
http://leanblog.org/audio103
Through our practice of Lean, we're looking at processes and our management system, looking to identify waste and opportunities for improvement.Lean is about engaging people to have them ask why we do things a certain way or if things could be better (it's not about finding fault from on high and telling them what to do).
The answer to why we (frontline staff or leaders) do something a certain way is often:
"We've always done it that way."
The fact we've always done something that way doesn't automatically mean it's a bad practice. But, we should be willing to challenge things to figure out if we should reinvent that process or tweak it. The same question applies to management practices.

Nov 9, 2015 • 11min
Automakers & Car Dealers Should Survey Customers
http://leanblog.org/audio102
The world (especially the world wide web) is full of surveys. Tell us how we're doing! Your satisfaction is important to us! We see this so often, it's easy to become numb to it in our Yelp-ified world.It's definitely a "first world problem," but I've been shopping for a new car over the past few months and I finally bought something. I won't disclose what I bought, but it's replacing a 2004 Saab 9-3 that I've had for 11 years now.
The car shopping and buying experience has its frustrations - that's nothing new...

Nov 6, 2015 • 9min
Confusion over #Lean Manufacturing, Lean Healthcare,
http://leanblog.org/audio101
I'm going to be attending the Lean Startup Conference in San Francisco next month, as a "faculty member," a moderator for a session, TBD, and maybe serving as a mentor. The organizers asked me to write a post introducing myself to that audience.Eric Ries, author of the book The Lean Startup: How Today's Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses, makes it very clear that the Lean Startup methodology has its roots in the Toyota Production System and Lean manufacturing. Ries writes about factory settings and gives credit to giants like Taiichi Ohno (listen to our podcast talking about this).
There are some in the Lean Startup circles who seem pretty unaware of the industrial roots of Lean. This often causes confusion.

Oct 8, 2015 • 5min
How Kaizen & Continuous Improvement are Key to
Many of you don’t care about football, but you might find it interesting, as I did, to learn that Northwestern’s defensive coordinator Mike Hankwitz is apparently a fan of Kaizen...
http://leanblog.org/audio100

Oct 4, 2015 • 8min
Donald Trump's Red Hat (and Other Politicians' Hats)
These Donald Trump hats (and hats for other candidates including Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush) are made by a Newark company, Unionwear. Lean is their strategy and their production system. That’s how they are competing against China.
http://leanblog.org/audio99


