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book

Personal Kanban Wins the Shingo Prize

Shingo Emblem

Personal Kanban won a Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence this year. This is the highest honor in Lean and we share the award with some pretty august company.This award is humbling. Shingo awards are usually focused on manufacturing or applications of specific Lean principles with many direct nods to Toyota.Personal Kanban is strongly rooted in Lean ideals, but it much more focused (as the name implies) on the individual – on us as people.Tonianne and I are greatly energized by this award and look forward to seeing Personal Kanban continue to grow and thrive.Read about it on CBS News and the Lean Systems Society sites.

Just Released: Why Plans Fail: Cognitive Bias, Decision Making, and Your Business.

Cog Bias book_cover_artboard EDITABLE

A few months ago, I wrote a series of posts in this blog about cognitive bias. Those became the pre-writing for this short ebook: Why Plans Fail.It’s $2.99, or free if you have Amazon Prime.This is the first in our new MemeMachine Series, which will be little eBooks like this that introduce a topic and begin discussions.Here’s the writeup for it from Amazon:Business runs on decisions. Recently, we've discovered that people aren't the great decision makers we thought they were.Business relies on estimates, plans, and projections - and we all know how accurate they tend to be. Careers are made, careers are broken based on accurate estimation and planning.But what if the successes and failures of these projects were not based on the prowess of those making the plans? What if success or failure were more often the result of a more complex set of events?Why Plans Fail directly addresses our ability of to plan, to forecast, and to make decisions.Written by Jim Benson, an urban planner, software developer, and business owner who has planned and built everything from small software projects, to houses, to urban freeway systems - Why Plans Fail is told by someone with much skin in the estimation and planning game.This short work is the first in the Modus Cooperandi Mememachine series - which looks specifically at underlying issues that directly impact the success of teams, companies, and individuals. The Mememachine series is meant to start conversations and advance discussion.

Announcing Personal Kanban: Mapping Work | Navigating Life

Personal Kanban

We are pleased to announce Jim Benson and Tonianne DeMaria Barry's new book

Personal Kanban: Mapping Work | Navigating Life

is available for purchase!And yes, there will be kindle, iBooks, and ePub versions out soon.To read more about the book click here.To purchase the book today click here.

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