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Ko Sasaki for The New York Times. An instructor ends a class on auto maintenance. The program is part of Toyota's efforts to maintain quality in the face of rapid overseas expansion.

In the typical company where I do Scrum consulting there may be urgency around improving the software development process without any urgency about changing processes that are broken today. A company wide impediment list needs to be maintained and the top item on the list needs a remediation plan and action today, not tomorrow. Eliminating impediments is a primary role for the Scrum Master who may need help from other parts of the company.

Avoiding complacency and acting aggressively requires "Kaizen mind." Toyota employees do not come to work today assuming nothing is broken. They feel that it is a crisis if they do not improve today by changing what they are doing so they do it better. There is no staying in the same place. Either you deteriorate or you move forward. Honesty, transparency, and trust are needed to surface and openly discuss impediments to progress. You cannot move forward without eliminating impediments.

A major focus of Scrum Inc's Scrum Master course is to instill "Scrum Kaizen mind" in participants. A CMMI Level 5 company did a retrospective on Scrum Master's trained with this emphasis and found their results in terms of productivity, customer and developer satisfaction were better than those not receiving some "Kaizen mind" training. It's all about the mindset!

Tracking velocity of your Scrum teams is essential to successful planning and implementation. Improving your velocity requires acceleration! Toyota has discovered the secret sauce and will soon be number one in the world of auto manufacturing. They are still accelerating away from competitors. Scrum teams can help software companies do the same.

The ‘Toyota Way’ Is Translated for a New Generation of Foreign Managers
By Maring Fackler, New York Times, February 15, 2007

“There is a sense of danger,” said Koki Konishi, a Toyota general manager who heads the institute (the Toyota Technical Skills Academy in Toyota City). “We must prevent the Toyota Way from getting more and more diluted as Toyota grows overseas.”

It used to be enough for the culture to be transmitted by word of mouth among Toyota’s Japanese employees, on factory floors and around cafeteria tables. But Toyota outgrew these informal teaching methods and created the institute, which is so secretive the company would not allow a reporter to visit it, let alone sit in on any classes. Mr. Konishi said Toyota was building similar centers in the United States, in Kentucky, and in Thailand.

“Before, when everyone was Japanese, we didn’t have to make these things explicit,” Mr. Konishi said. “Now we have to set the Toyota Way down on paper and teach it.”

“Mutual ownership of problems,” is one slogan. Other tenets include “genchi genbutsu,” or solving problems at the source instead of behind desks, and the “kaizen mind,” an unending sense of crisis behind the company’s constant drive to improve.

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