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Lean Blog Audio: Practical Lean Thinking, Psychological Safety, and Continuous Improvement
Mark Graban
455 episodes
4 days ago
Lean Blog Audio is a short-form podcast featuring audio versions of articles from LeanBlog.org, written, read, and expanded by Mark Graban. Each episode explores practical Lean thinking, psychological safety, continuous improvement, and leadership—through real-world examples from healthcare, manufacturing, startups, and other complex work environments. Topics include learning from mistakes, reducing fear and blame, improving systems, and using data thoughtfully through tools like Process Behavior Charts. Episodes often go beyond the original blog post, adding fresh context and reflections fo
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Business
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All content for Lean Blog Audio: Practical Lean Thinking, Psychological Safety, and Continuous Improvement is the property of Mark Graban and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Lean Blog Audio is a short-form podcast featuring audio versions of articles from LeanBlog.org, written, read, and expanded by Mark Graban. Each episode explores practical Lean thinking, psychological safety, continuous improvement, and leadership—through real-world examples from healthcare, manufacturing, startups, and other complex work environments. Topics include learning from mistakes, reducing fear and blame, improving systems, and using data thoughtfully through tools like Process Behavior Charts. Episodes often go beyond the original blog post, adding fresh context and reflections fo
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Business
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Five NUMMI Tour Lessons That Still Define Lean Thinking
Lean Blog Audio: Practical Lean Thinking, Psychological Safety, and Continuous Improvement
11 minutes 36 seconds
1 week ago
Five NUMMI Tour Lessons That Still Define Lean Thinking

The blog post

In this episode, Mark reflects on a visit he made twenty years ago to the NUMMI plant in Fremont, California — the Toyota-GM joint venture that became legendary in Lean circles. What stayed with him wasn’t flashy tools or so-called Lean perfection, but a series of small, human moments that revealed how Lean actually works as a management system.

Through six short stories — a broken escalator, aluminum foil, an explanatory safety sign, a pull-based gift shop, imperfect 5S, and visible audit boards — Mark explores the deeper principles behind Lean thinking: asking “why” before spending money, respecting people enough to explain decisions, encouraging small frontline ideas, and reinforcing standards through daily leadership behavior. Long before the term was popular, NUMMI demonstrated psychological safety in action.

The episode also contrasts NUMMI’s management system with what came after, when the same building became Tesla’s first factory — underscoring a central lesson: buildings and technology don’t create quality. Culture does. These NUMMI lessons remain just as relevant today for leaders trying to build systems that support learning, accountability, and continuous improvement.

Explore the original NUMMI Tour Tales:

  • NUMMI Tour Tale #1: Why Fix the Escalator?
  • NUMMI Tour Tale #2: The Power of Reynolds Wrap
  • NUMMI Tour Tale #3: The Power of Why
  • NUMMI Tour Tale #4: The Pull Gift Shop
  • NUMMI Tour Tale #5: Nobody Is Perfect
  • NUMMI Tour Tales #6: “You Get What You Inspect”


Lean Blog Audio: Practical Lean Thinking, Psychological Safety, and Continuous Improvement
Lean Blog Audio is a short-form podcast featuring audio versions of articles from LeanBlog.org, written, read, and expanded by Mark Graban. Each episode explores practical Lean thinking, psychological safety, continuous improvement, and leadership—through real-world examples from healthcare, manufacturing, startups, and other complex work environments. Topics include learning from mistakes, reducing fear and blame, improving systems, and using data thoughtfully through tools like Process Behavior Charts. Episodes often go beyond the original blog post, adding fresh context and reflections fo