What does it mean to democratize knowledge?
Traditionally, most businesses have followed a similar organizational structure.
Decisions are made by a small number of people and these decisions impact the many. This is known as the top-down structure and is only effective in situations where “there is a set of clear rules and only a single solution.”
In the complex and fast-paced world of manufacturing, there is rarely ever one solution to a problem.
In fact, this idea goes against the very idea of lean manufacturing and continuous improvement.
In manufacturing, top-down decision-making is not the best way to go.
The familiar projects of Total Productivity Management (TPM), Training within Industry (TWI), and lean manufacturing started by valuing the worker.
These initiatives reimagined worker-focused training on the shop floor as a valuable opportunity to increase:
Lean manufacturing encourages strategic thinkers to democratize knowledge as a way to increase operational excellence.
Lean pioneers in the 1960s discovered that a dependance on the many rather than the one made an irreversible impact - not only on the work being done, but on the structure of the company itself.
👉 PS. We've collected our favorite Kaizen quotes here.
Emphasis was placed on:
Successful implementation revealed just how powerful a resource the teams on the shop floor could be.
In lean manufacturing, employees performing tasks are asked to continuously analyze processes and their own methods of working in order to find problems and develop solutions.
These solutions are then incorporated back into a standard way of working.
Progress is evident when knowledge is...
The success of lean manufacturing techniques in the 20th century was an undeniable use-case for the success of democratized knowledge and a bottom-up way of working.
This reimagining of the top-down structure is known as the “bottom-up” way of working, and is a working proof of democratized knowledge in action.
It’s as simple as the name makes it sound.
While CEOs still lead the way by developing overarching business strategies, decision making influence has been shifted to those who work with a product on a daily basis. These are frequently the individuals who assemble or produce on the factory floor - think of the employee who assembles the car you drive.
This shift is revolutionary (and particularly effective) because it moves the focus of knowledge capture and generation to the people who have the most expertise and need it the most.
Close to 60 years after the birth of lean manufacturing, the practices of TPM and TWI need to be updated for a changing industry.
Digital solutions that embrace a lean and bottom-up way of working are an agile way to restructure the way your shop floor operates. They embrace the spirit (not to mention the benefits) of lean manufacturing in a way that keeps pace with the world around us.
Crowdsourced digital work instructions and SOPs are an incredibly effective solution to democratizing knowledge and embracing a true mindset of lean manufacturing.
No longer buried in a counterintuitive organizational structure, the skills and learnings of your team are captured in a shared body of practical knowledge.
This allows for the constant re-evaluation and refinement of processes and procedures.
Want to learn more?
👉 Empowering a Culture of Operational Excellence.
👉 Inspirational Kaizen Quotes to Motivate Your Team.
👉 Gain the Benefits of TPM Manufacturing with Frontline Knowledge.