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The Lean Post / Articles / Value Stream Maps and Battle Plans – Are They Worth Nothing?

Value Stream Maps and Battle Plans – Are They Worth Nothing?

Line Management

Value Stream Maps and Battle Plans – Are They Worth Nothing?

By Chet Marchwinski and Judy Worth

March 27, 2015

“I’m reluctant to say maps are nothing, but there’s a difference between maps and mapping," Judy Worth says, paraphrasing Eisenhower’s insight that battle plans meant nothing, but PLANNING for battle was indispensable. “An awful lot of lot of the benefit that comes out of value-stream maps comes from the process of mapping with other people."

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Learning to See, the workbook that introduced the concept of value-stream mapping to the English-speaking world, was first published by LEI in 1999. But despite the staying power of this popular and valuable lean tool, people fail to get its maximum benefit according to Judy Worth, LEI faculty member and facilitator of value-stream improvement efforts in healthcare, government, and manufacturing organizations (Worth is also the instructional designer for the Mapping to See Training Kit and co-author of Perfecting Patient Journeys).

I spoke more with Judy on this topic at the Lean Transformation Summit earlier this month (watch the full video below). “I’m reluctant to say maps are nothing, but there’s a difference between maps and mapping,” she says, paraphrasing American President and General Dwight Eisenhower’s insight that battle plans meant nothing, but planning for battle was indispensable. “An awful lot of the benefit that comes out of value-stream maps comes from the process of mapping with other people.”

The problem is that many companies don’t follow the mapping process properly. Typical mistakes she sees are not having the right people involved or not generating a plan for getting from a current state to a leaner future state. “There’s a lot more mileage to be gotten out of mapping than people typically get.”

In the video, Worth shares these tips:

  • Ask, who must be in the same room for mapping to be effective?
  • How will you make sure the mapping exercise has a meaningful business impact on the targeted value stream?
  • Senior management’s mapping role
  • Consider what to do before the team begins mapping
  • Consider what must be in the mapping “charter” or value proposition
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Learning to See Using
Value-Stream Mapping 

Develop a blueprint of improvements that will achieve your organization’s strategic objectives.

Written by:

Chet Marchwinski
|Judy Worth

About Chet Marchwinski

Chet has been a humble, unwashed scribe of the lean continuous improvement movement since books by Taiichi Ohno and Shigeo Shingo first hit North America in the 1980s. At LEI, he contributes to content creation, marketing, public relations, and social media. Previously, he also wrote case studies on lean management implementations in…

About Judy Worth

Judy Worth got her first introduction to lean from one of her business partners, who left their company in Lexington, KY, to work at the start up of Toyota’s first North American plant in Georgetown, KY. Judy’s focus has been on implementing lean in healthcare. She has extensive experience facilitating value-stream mapping workshops in healthcare organizations, including hospitals and primary care and has also provided training and coaching services for healthcare in-house lean facilitators. Judy is the co-author of the LEI publication, Perfecting Patient Journeys, a step-by-step guide for moving from value-stream mapping to sustainable continuous improvement.

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