Six Sigma Quality Resources for Achieving Six Sigma Results
Click To Learn More About PremiumLinks
 Home > Culture Evolution  > Shared Need Search:
 
 for    
Publications
Marketplace
| iSixSigma
Stuff
| iSixSigma
Blogosphere
| Events
Calendar
| The
Dictionary
| Discussion
Forum
| Find
a Job
| Post
a Job
| Industry
News
| Newsletter
Signup
| Sigma
Calculator
| Online
Surveys
Nominations for iSixSigma Awards! close November 30 – nominate your project/program today!
iSixSigma Magazine Signup
 iSixSigma Live!  
  Live! Home
  2010 Summit & Awards
  2010 Energy Forum
 Free Newsletters!  
  Sign Up Now!
  Manage Subscriptions
  New To Six Sigma?
  Six Sigma Q&A
  Cert. Practice Test
  Problem Solving Wizard
  ISSSP Info
ISSSP Is The Official Six Sigma Society of iSixSigma
 Channels 
  Europe
  Financial Services
  Healthcare
  Military
  Software / IT
 Quality Directory 
  Best Practices
  Certifications/Awards
  Consultants
  Culture Evolution
   Sponsors
   Teams
   Training
  Methodologies
  News & Events
  Organizations
  Product/Service Guides
  Statistics & Analysis
  Tools & Templates
  Voice of the Customer
  Free Whitepapers
 Related Topics 
  Innovation
  Outsourcing/Offshoring
  Business Process Mgt
 Quick Access 
  Help
  Search
  Advertise Here
  Article Archives
  Newsletter Archives
 User Feedback 
  Please suggest site
  improvements.
 
  [ larger form ]

Email This Page

Return To Previous Page
From: 
Please enter your email address above.
To: 
Please enter recipient's email address above.
Subject Line: 
Please enter a subject line for your email above.
Additional Notes or Comments: 

Page:  Why Don't More Leaders Get It? Explanations for Six Sigma

By Jeffrey Mitchell

Humankind has successfully split the atom and put people on the moon, but explaining Six Sigma to busy business leaders is a different matter.

I've been in dozens of meetings where a leader - sometimes a department VP, other times a division president or CEO - has asked for a description of "this Six Sigma thing." Each time, someone responded with talk of continuous improvement, customer voices and data-driven decisions. The leaders were usually very quiet during these explanations - too quiet. And, after almost every meeting, I would hear the person who gave the explanation grumble that the leader "just didn't get it." Sometimes the person grumbling was me!

In the spirit of continuous improvement, I began to ask, why? Why don't leaders "get it" as quickly and easily as we'd like? Possibly the root cause is in the way Six Sigma is typically explained. In other words, the problem may not be distracted or dumb leaders. My hypothesis is that leaders new to Six Sigma don't need to know about Six Sigma to become engaged, they need to know what Six Sigma looks and feels like in their world.

You Need Leaders to Lead Quality
Leadership support is a prerequisite for quality. Leaders set the agenda, make the rules, and sign the checks. Without leadership's genuine commitment, your company's Six Sigma effort will end with the same results as quality guru Dr. Deming's quality campaigns of the 1940's. He didn't require leadership involvement and ended up with "nothing" he said, "not even smoke." Leadership buy-in is necessary, but not sufficient. Leaders must literally lead the way.

Certainly, no one can effectively lead what he or she doesn't understand. That's why crafting a compelling and accurate explanation of Six Sigma is so valuable.

Explanation Traps and How to Avoid Them
Below, I've listed three approaches to explaining Six Sigma that I've seen backfire, along with an alternative. I don't want to put words in your mouth. You know your company and your audience best. My goal is to help you avoid the verbal potholes I and others have already hit.

  • Trap #1: Mistaking Defining for Explaining
  • Trap #2: It's Good for You
  • Trap #3: It Only Works If Everyone Does It

Next Page > Explanation Traps and How to Avoid Them
Page 3 > Trap #3: It Only Works If Everyone Does It

Return To Previous Page



"The Bottom Line" Links

BEST SELLING PRODUCTS (iSixSigma Publications)
  1. Six Sigma Black Belt (DMAIC) Training Slides - 2009 Version!
    The 2009 Six Sigma Black Belt course includes over 40 more slides than the 2008 version. Contents include: 1,220 PowerPo...
  2. Certified Lean Six Sigma Black Belt Assessment Exam
    Interested in assessing your knowledge of Lean Six Sigma? Preparing for certifications? Testing your students and traine...
  3. Certified Lean Six Sigma Green Belt Assessment Exam
    This assessment exam is useful for students interested in assessing their knowledge of Lean Six Sigma on the Green Belt ...
  4. Certified Lean Six Sigma Black Belt E-book
    In 670 pages learn everything within the Lean Six Sigma DMAIC body of knowledge to successfully achieve Black Belt certi...
  5. Kaizen Workshop E-book
    This 150+ page ebook teaches key tools and techniques of Kaizen, as well as real application to enhance learning. Kaizen...
  6. Six Sigma Yellow Belt Training Slides - 2009 Version
    The 2009 Six Sigma Yellow Belt course is comprised of: 503 slidesInstructor notesSlide explanations15 data sets19 suppo...
  7. Design For Six Sigma (DFSS) E-Book or Print
    Need an "encyclopedia" consisting of many of the tools you’ll study? Need a helpful refresher to apply the DFSS process?...
 
Six Sigma AdLinks
AdLinks Information


Google AdWords
 
Home | Discussion Forum | Event Calendar | Job Shop
Link To iSixSigma | Rate This Page | Report A Problem | Free Content For Your Site | Submit Article For Publishing
 Terms of Service. �2000-2009 iSixSigma. All rights reserved. v3.0lb, 0.0
About iSixSigmaContact UsPrivacy PolicySite Map