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Is There a Difference Between 6 Sigma, Lean, Kaizen, BPM, Continuous Improvement, and Reengineering?

Anyone new to process work can easily become confused by so many different terms that seem to mean the same thing. I wonder sometimes why we keep adding new terms to what basically comes down to “quality.” All these techniques have the same goal — to achieve improvements in delivering a product or service to the customer. “Improvement” may follow the form of more efficiency for the business or more effectiveness for the customer. All methods have a connection to the Total Quality Management (TQM) movement promoted by gurus such as W. Edwards Deming and Joseph M. Juran, among others. Some offer a more philosophical approach than a specific set of tools.

With so many techniques to choose from, do you select the newest, the trendiest, or perhaps the tried and true method? Do you have to choose one technique? Why not take the best from all and call it something else that works in your culture. You can simply call your technique Business Process Improvement, Continuous Improvement, or something similar that works in your organization. The name you decide to use makes a difference in the acceptance rate at your company because as we all know “culture trumps process all the time.”

You may find my simplified explanation of the various terms (in alphabetical order) helpful:

In summary, all techniques focus on improvement; all have the customer at the core; and all want to improve the efficiency, effectiveness, and adaptability of the business. As you read more about these techniques, you may notice what seems like territorial wars between some of the methods – e.g., lean vs. six sigma, or continuous improvement vs. reengineering. While you will find some differences (evolutionary or revolutionary, ongoing or one time, specific tools), you will see more similarity than differences.

In the end, simply think process improvement and spend time defining what “quality” means to your organization.

Copyright 2011 Susan Page

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