
Lean Blog Audio: Practical Lean Thinking, Psychological Safety, and Continuous Improvement You Can’t Cherry-Pick Lean: Why Pull, Heijunka, and CI Don’t Stick
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Jan 6, 2026 Discover why cherry-picking Lean practices fails to spark lasting change in organizations. Mark Graban reveals that without commitment to the full system, foundational elements like pull and continuous improvement can't thrive. He emphasizes the importance of psychological safety, where team members feel empowered to voice concerns. Delve into how a focus on long-term philosophy, aligned leadership, and confronting systemic issues is essential for true Lean success. This conversation challenges listeners to rethink their approach to adoption.
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Cherry-Picking Produces Superficial Gains
- Organizations often adopt visible Lean tools while avoiding deeper systemic change.
- Mark Graban warns that cherry-picking methods creates the appearance of improvement but not lasting results.
Leveling Reveals Hidden Variation
- Leveling and pull surface uncomfortable truths about variation and instability.
- Graban says these methods test leadership maturity because they reveal demand patterns and supplier reliability issues.
Psychological Safety Is Non-Negotiable
- Psychological safety is a prerequisite for pull, leveling, and CI to work.
- Without safety, problems get hidden as workarounds and fear-based compliance replaces learning.
