Jobs and a Strategy to Create Good
Ones... Every nation in the world is on a quest to create more jobs.
As they should be. But, we don’t want just “jobs.” We want good
jobs. Our friend Zeynep Ton offers a prescription for good jobs. Ton,
MIT professor and author of the Good Jobs Strategy, has seen jobs
from many angles. Growing up in her native Turkey, Prof Ton had the
opportunity to observe tough but decent paying factory jobs. In her
university research in the US, where the economy has steadily moved
from manufacturing to the service sector, Professor Ton has observed
with dismay the sad state of service jobs and the wide variety of
policies with which firms approach the employment of people under the
pressure of harsh business strategies. But, the good news: Ton has
also identified firms – like Costco, Trader Joes, Mercadona, and
Toyota – that do a great job of treating employees right. And she
shows how and why the firms reap the rewards just as well as do the
employees.
Ton has spoken with us here at LEI a
couple of times and argues that good jobs and lean thinking are
neatly aligned. “For companies, good jobs are a prerequisite to
operational excellence and TPS. You need to have it,” she said,
adding, “At the same time operational excellence is the
prerequisite to good jobs. These two are needed for each other—they
form a virtuous cycle.” Her book provides detailed, concrete
evidence that good jobs aren’t simply “good to have” but that
the good jobs approach is a concrete strategy, in her words, one that
combines investment in people, with specific operational decisions
related to a company’s product focus, its balance of job
standardization and employee empowerment, as well as tangible ways
that employees contribute to continuous improvement. As she describes
these characteristics of a good job, she asks with a smile, “Does
any of this sound familiar to lean thinkers?”
The answer is, of course, yes it does.
Lean Thinking, with its roots in the Toyota Production System, has a
lot to say about all this, of course, beginning with addressing the
question: what is a “job”?
A job is three things. Three dimensions
that together comprise something greater than their sum: 1) the work
that needs to be done, 2) a relationship, and 3) specific,
documentable mechanisms of engaging people in their jobs, in the work
they do. Together, these pieces comprise an ecosystem or overall work
environment that results from the many decisions that go into making
up three dimensions. A good job begins with good work. Let’s
explore.
Fundamentals of the Work

A job is made up of that most
fundamental of lean concerns (right alongside the primary concern for
value): the work. What is the work to be done to create the value?
Lean thinking, borrowing from its roots in the Toyota Production
System, has much to say about work, but, unfortunately, as lean
thinking has continued its march from humble beginnings on the
factory floor to frontiers of numerous kinds, focus on the work too
often gets lost in the haze of change management theories, strategy
initiatives, leadership development programs, and the like. It’s
good to keep it simple: in any organization, we gather together every
day for one purpose: to do the work. Tote that bail, pull that barge,
process that invoice, acquire that company, sell that widget, scrub
that heart valve.
The work pie. Work itself has three
chunks and any attempt to understand it deeply must begin here: the
value creating work, non-value creating work, and waste.
The Relationship
A job becomes a job (whether after the
work has been defined or before) upon agreement between an employer
and the employed. Say I need my trees trimmed and you are a teenager
looking to make some spending money. I offer 40 dollars for what we
agree is a couple hours work. We agree you will do the work this
Sunday and I will pay you 10 bucks today and the remainder after I
inspect the work that it has been done to my satisfaction.
Or, say I have a company and I post a
position that pays $20 per hour for 40 hours per week, 20 days per
month, 240 days per year. Weekends and holidays off, plus xx days
paid vacation. If we’re in the USA and it’s any time since the
1930s, we probably have a signed, legal, upper case “contract”
that binds us, that states the terms of our agreement.
Whether formal upper case Contract or
informal lower case handshake-based mutual understanding, the
contract between two parties – employer and employed – is the
second piece of what constitutes a job. It is a relationship.
Not so long ago in the USA, a contract
(formal or informal) between employer and employee was part of a
broader social contract that served as an enabling mechanism for the
greater society to function effectively. The steady erosion of
employment relationships as social contract has led to huge segments
of society struggling without a safety net to ensure provision of
basic human needs. In recent decades the argument has gained currency
that workers could always retrain themselves as companies were free
to chase willy-nilly whatever latest trend promised the highest
profits. After all, if technology and customer needs combine to mean
we don’t need many millwrights, we can’t simply keep people busy
running mills just for the sake of running mills. But, it is simply
naïve to think a 50 year old millwright is going re-educate himself
to become a software engineer.
Thus, social contracts and business
realities sometimes collide. Often one side loses. If there’s going
to be a loser, it’s usually the worker. It’s worth noting the
incredible lengths Toyota has gone to, time and again, to ease the
pain or to avoid job loss altogether.
In earlier days, it was common to make
statements such as “a day’s pay for a day’s work.” Those
platitudes sound old-fashioned in contemporary language but actually
form the basis for employer-employee work relationships even today.
Indeed, what is a day’s work?
Is a day’s work a matter of time, a
matter of using up eight hours? Eight hours doing what? Being on the
premises? Most people would say no, it means eight hours to do some
task or set of tasks. So, are we agreeing on the time spent (8 hours)
or tasks worked on, work completed?
There’s where it gets interesting.
Out of eight hours, how much time is spent “working”? If “work”
is a matter of time spent, then the entire 8 hours is “work.”
But, if “work” entails effort expended toward accomplishing
tasks, well, that is another matter entirely. This, then, is where
the two basic chunks that make up a job – the work and the contract
– intersect. (We shall see them intersect again in the formation of
an ecosystem.)
Time does not = work. Motion does not = work.
The much maligned time clock, cursed by
laborers as a virtual ball & chain pinning them like slaves to
their work stations ensured only the potential for work to be done,
it never ensured it actually would be done and certainly not done in
the right way. So, supervisors and managers (themselves merely
employees of a different class) clung onto the thing that was easiest
to see – they looked for movement. Keep everyone and everything –
every human and every machine – moving. Keeps things humming. Like
a big machine. Charlie Chaplin and all that.
It’s time to replace the time clock
with the work pie.

This is work that is “standardized”
but fully engages the whole human, feet and hands, head and heart.
This is what Prof. Ton is seeing at some (too few!) companies, and
what we have seen at companies in the lean community over the past
20-30 years. But, the number of companies that go this far remain too
few and far between. One factor: integration of various subsystems in
which integration can best be understand at (you guessed it) at the
level where the work is actually done.
The Ecosystem and the Work Experience
Observe your work, how it is designed,
performed, improved – that is where you will find your culture.
Organizational cultures are complex
systems. And systems, or ecosystems, we know are difficult to design.
Choose your favorite organizational systems theorist: Edgar Schein,
Russel Ackoff, W. Edwards Deming, Peter Senge – they all say
essentially the same thing about the nature of systems dynamics.
Systems are complex and system design is an aspiration as much as it
is a science.
Deming wrote: “A system must have an
aim. Without an aim, there is no system. The aim is a value
judgement. Joining an organization is joining an aim, whether well-
or ill-defined.” How about we make it our aim to create great value
for customers through providing great jobs for people? Back to the
deep linkages between lean thinking and Zeynep Ton’s Good Jobs
Strategy.
This is far more than an add-on
empowerment program. It is a different view of work itself. We’d
like to blur the distinction between work and worker, maker and
object. We want to integrate people development inextricably with the
design and doing and improving of the work. This gets to the heart of
lean thinking and practice: products are a function of the people who
make them; to make good products, it pays for organizations to invest
in developing people. This is true for factory work, office work,
service work, managerial work, knowledge work. If it can happen on
the factory floor, it can happen anywhere.
“100 Years of Innovation in the Work”
Most process improvement initiatives,
including so many “lean programs” never go this far. They stop at
addressing only the technical side of the equation, ignoring the
human side. In those instances, companies are practicing scientific
management with perhaps some good industrial engineering. But, the
technical side of lean practice without the social side isn’t lean
at all.
Other “lean programs” and
organizational development initiatives address only the social side,
“human centered” programs often with sophisticated engagement and
empowerment programs, many harkening back to Frederick Hertzberg and
Elton Mayo. But, as above in reverse: the social side of lean without
the technical side isn’t lean at all.
My observations tell me that the lack
of balance among firms in 2017 is split about evenly between leaving
out the social side versus leaving out the technical side. What do
you see?
There are more aspects to creating a
great job than improving the technical pieces of the work itself.
Equally true: there are more aspects to creating a great job than
tending to only the social side, too.
Actually design the work. Don’t
let it just evolve. Don’t devolve into laissez faire in the naïve
belief that since “the people who do the work know it best …”
you can therefore simply leave it to “them.” Understand the
needed outcomes, the tasks, the specifications (quality,
performance, other), the steps, the sequence, the timing. Be
engaged.
Tend to the social side.
Understand the individual levels of engagement in the work, but also
the relationships, the levels of trust, the interactions. Think of
it as a social design project
And recognize that these considerations
aren’t ancillary to your business strategy – they are integral to
how you create the future you want, integral to the becoming of your
future. If we all do this, we can make companies and economies that
provide more prosperity for more of us.
Here’s a way to see how it all fits
together. I invite you to print it out and play around with it. A
version for your company might have different points of emphasis here
and there, and it should certainly have more specificity. I hope it’s
obvious how actualizing all this has to be a multi-functional
endeavor. HR: this is your chance to step up! (But, don’t try to do
it alone!)
Note how this ties together several
dimensions of the Lean Transformation Framework (link to animation):
your basic thinking foundation, your work design and people
development pillars, and your desired leader behaviors (actually
behaviors of everyone, not just “leaders) and management system.
(And never forget to tie it all back to your purpose, your problem to
be solved, the job to be done!)
Want Better Employees? Be a Better
Employer
So, the lean thinking philosophy of job
design holds that the technical/process and the socio/people sides of
the equation to create a great work experiences are equally
important. Well-designed work recognizes all the social and technical
factors that go into producing the right quality at the right cost in
the most timely way possible, with performance consistently improving
over time. Treat employees well and with respect, and you can expect
them to do their best. Leave out the social or the technical side and
pay the price. Combine great work design with exemplary treatment of
the humans who do it, and, as Zeynep Ton argues, reap the rewards.
We want more jobs, but we want them to
be great jobs. And a great job needs great work.
John Shook
Chairman Lean Enterprise Institute,
Lean Global Network
Jobs and a Strategy to Create Good
Ones... Every nation in the world is on a quest to create more jobs.
As they should be. But, we don’t want just “jobs.” We want good
jobs. Our friend Zeynep Ton offers a prescription for good jobs. Ton,
MIT professor and author of the Good Jobs Strategy, has seen jobs
from many angles. Growing up in her native Turkey, Prof Ton had the
opportunity to observe tough but decent paying factory jobs. In her
university research in the US, where the economy has steadily moved
from manufacturing to the service sector, Professor Ton has observed
with dismay the sad state of service jobs and the wide variety of
policies with which firms approach the employment of people under the
pressure of harsh business strategies. But, the good news: Ton has
also identified firms – like Costco, Trader Joes, Mercadona, and
Toyota – that do a great job of treating employees right. And she
shows how and why the firms reap the rewards just as well as do the
employees.
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