Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Benchmark Six Sigma Forum

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.
Message added by Mayank Gupta,

Harada Method is a management philosophy that aims at creating a culture of continuous improvement and innovation in the organization. It was developed by Dr. Takashi Harada and focuses on developing employees' problem solving skills and their engagement levels.

 

An application-oriented question on the topic along with responses can be seen below. The best answer was provided by Anshul Vaidya on 25th Feb 2023.

 

Applause for all the respondents - Anshul Vaidya, Balaji Loganathan, Nunhuck Oosman, Suresh Kumar Gupta.

Featured Replies

Q 543. What is the Harada Method? How can organizations use it to improve their Lean Six Sigma implementation strategy?

 

Note for website visitors - Two questions are asked every week on this platform. One on Tuesday and the other on Friday.

Solved by AnshulVaidya

  • Solution

 

Harada Method is a lean improvement method, developed by Takashi Harada, that targets “Enterprise Performance Improvement”, through daily employee coaching initiatives and, augmented motivation routines.

 

Lean Methods attempt to preempt waste removal before actually being produced in process. The Harada Method helps individuals leap ahead towards self-reliance, by targeting reduction of the eighth lean waste, “under-utilized talent”, through “a five-step approach”.

 

To initiate a foundation, let’s start with two Japanese terms, associated with the method--

 

Monozukuri and Hitozukuri

 

Monozukuri: refers to sense of craftsmanship. The method propagates that employees can reach excellence in work by taking pride in their work. An endeavour should be made by employees to strive for continuous improvement.

 

Hitozukuri refers to continuous process of helping people excel in work and achieving excellence in tasks and skills. Hitozukuri advocates that people need to be trained on skills, tasks required to set their own work targets. The employees then are encouraged to attain the performance targets, set by employees for themselves.

 

Harada method propounds that the employees can achieve Monozukuri through Hitozukuri.

 

The method envisions a five-step approach to plan for skill achievement, initiate improvement in task and reach excellence in a skill:

 

1.      Premeditation: Defining the skill, a worker would like to improve upon.

 

2.      Personal excellence: meeting excellence in desired skill and task.

 

3.      Goal setting: participating in goal planning sessions with mentor, coaches, managers to reach mastery in a skill.

 

4.      Selfless service: applying new learning with utmost dedication to production.

 

5.      Self-reliance: exert self-effort into production, and develop self-reliance with competency.

 

image.png.5ea27ef43a12b28cd21a2c3aec78d6a3.png

 

Above five action-points are realized by starting with an introspection session on the purpose of work, between employee and coaches/trainer. A task, skill and goal are identified, where competency may be mastered by the company employee. An in-depth analysis of strengths and weakness helps deconstruct preparedness required, to attain mastery. A worker or participant is required to list out 64 small steps to gain expertise the requisite work-domain, in precise time horizon.  A 64 charts box is constructed to “list and grid” 64 key identified ideas in a 3*3 matrix depicted here-under:

 

image.png.254b773b08c65ba955319f262a0d3433.png

 

image.png.a43103f4265e1dd390d29017bb64189f.png

 

In training interaction, employees are made to introspect about meaning for self-reliance for themselves.  An employee is made aware about Mental Wellness, Skill technique n style, Physical Health endurance, Life aspects at work and outside of work. These four frontiers of human existence are discussed, with employee’s past performance and future expected performance on paper, during learning sessions. Basis the discussion, goal, purpose and targeted goal completion time line as a part of training plan are discussed and, finalized for the employee.  

 

New routines are identified, prioritized in order of importance and urgency. An employee is made aware about new daily routines and “time framed goals”, that an employee is expected to complete in sequenced time duration. The completion timeline is estimated for each routine, with completion date defined for each targeted goal, actionable idea and new routine. Managers and employees are encouraged to record their daily progress on trajected improvement plan and training sessions, in a progress dairy maintained by the employee.

 

image.png.1549dbb21d1f7f8358dd6f28ee5ea4f8.png

 

image.png.b9f5b8a1910fafe72fb80fad5ee86c19.png

 

image.png.5e2bfea7d77b19d89a2d56c3661b26b1.png

 

 

Harada Method is keenly followed by Toyota Motors through adaptation of logo “making things is making people” (Monozukuri wa hitozukuri) or “develop people and then build products” in Toyota Production System. Harada Method is ingrained in Toyota Lean methodology as Leader standard work. The structure encompasses a shift from “thinking results” to “results and process” by translating focus on process, into a concrete expectation from leader’s job performance.

 

 

Inventor of the Harada Method - Takashi Harada

 

Takashi Harada, a Japanese high school teacher, created what is globally known as the Harada method, which provides a process for hitozukuri. The Harada method majorly concentrates on the human aspect of Lean and supports employees to be successful by identifying their goal or task that helps them move forward.

This method aligns with Lean Six Sigma and other methodologies that drive continuous improvement.

 

About the Harada Method

 

Mr. Harada recognized that the principles used in sports shall also bring success to companies. This method revolves around the human side of Lean and helps people to achieve success by recognizing and adopting a task that helps them move forward.

 

The Harada method defines an individual through five stages

1.       Premeditation

2.       Personal excellence

3.       Goal setting

4.       Selfless service

5.       Self-reliance.

 

In this approach, you will define a strong goal and then break the goal into discrete components. These components are put together in the table form called the Open Window 64 or OW64. The final goal is surrounded by eight essential keys for completing the ultimate goal. Then, these eight keys are subdivided into eight areas of focus for personal development.

 

The Harada Method: To Reduce - 8th Waste

 

One of the ways organizations help make the most of their value is by using Lean techniques and getting rid of waste. As we all know, there are eight types of waste that can improve profitability and create more value for the business.

They are: 1) Transport, 2) Inventory, 3) Motion, 4) Waiting, 5) Over-production, 6) Over-processing, 7) Defects,

8) Skills/talent:  (Underutilized skills, knowledge, and talent of people, inadequate training for delegated tasks)

  • The first seven wastes are majorly from the manufacturing process. There are tools and methodologies like Kaizen, Six Sigma, 5S, and more that help eliminates or reduce such waste.
  • The eighth waste deals with the people involved in the process; better utilizing and handling employees will reduce waste.

The bottom line of this method is to become self-reliant; it is the self-confidence that will help them use their skills not only for their own development but for that of the organization.

By finding and embracing a purpose or job that advances their progress, employees can be successful using the Harada method, which addresses the human element of Lean. By addressing the 8th Waste of Lean, the underutilization of people's creative talents, the Harada Method may be employed to achieve complete collaboration for a business's Lean efforts. It encourages people to take control of their lives so they can develop strong work skills and complete independence. It demonstrates how both the business and each person may achieve success.

 

Harada was a track and field instructor in an underwhelming junior high school in Osaka, Japan. He noticed as a coach that his athletes were being outperformed by pupils from other schools. No amount of encouragement improved his runners' performance. Harada was aware that his students' perspectives needed to alter. He researched how effective teams, coaches, and leaders operated. He developed a strategy that enabled his students succeed more as a result of these studies.

 

The Harada methodology was created with the intention of preparing each pupil (or worker) to be an excellent leader and coach who can assemble a successful team. This approach is consistent with Six Sigma and various continuous improvement-oriented methodologies and tools. The secret to the strategy is to request that each employee select a life goal they want to achieve. It calls on everyone to master a specific ability. People have something to aim for when they go to work because of it. It is a well-planned, step-by-step procedure that aids in helping people transform so they can succeed for both themselves and their businesses.

 

The Harada method's core value is self-reliance, or people's ability and confidence to develop their talents to the point where they are essentially irreplaceable. They are able to apply their skills for both their own and the organization's advancement because to their self-confidence. One can rely on these workers to make wise, educated decisions. As the employees themselves establish the goals, there is no doubt as to who is responsible for achieving these objectives.

 

The Harada method promotes development at all organizational levels in implementing Six sigma Strategy which include the following:

 

  • It transforms managers into coaches and leaders.
  • In addition to raising one's skill level, it also helps one develop a vision for their long-term success as a person.
  • This technique teaches people how to develop more manageable goals after they have a clear picture of what they're seeking to accomplish.
  • As people strive for achievement, their self-esteem rises, which motivates them even more to perform better. Also, it raises their confidence.
  • Repeating success is simpler once the future course is clear.
  • Any person has the potential to succeed.

 

The Harada method emphasizes self-reliance; people should develop themselves to the point where success comes naturally. This can be accomplished via enhancing a person's character, abilities, health, and way of life. Yet, success cannot be attained unless a one puts up the effort to do so. Whether it's data entry or tricky machinery operation, the people must be able to master the talent they're working on. After a talent is acquired, the person can refine it and make sure it is used regularly.

 

The Harada technique guides a person through the following five phases:

 

  1. Selecting a skill in advance that one wants to master
  2. Personal achievement: mastering the selected ability
  3. Set objectives: Establishing goals for accomplishing excellence
  4. Selfless deeds: giving the assignments your all
  5. Self-reliance is the ability to rely on oneself to carry out tasks and achieve goals.

 

The top level steps that foster independence are defined by the Harada method. Choose a goal, create a timeline, and make a strategy to reach the goal. There are several recommendations people should adhere to in order to accomplish their goals:

 

People should choose objectives that are consistent with both their own personal and organizational ambitions. The hardest stage is choosing a goal because doing so involves committing to it and running the risk of failing. Assuring that the objective is in accordance with the company's aims can help to aid success and make it simpler to get the backing of your managers and coworkers. Finally, create a schedule for completing the task. A realistic timeline must be established else the timeline will be unsuccessful if the deadline is overly aggressive or loose.

Implement the essential progress-monitoring procedures. People still can not know whether or not they're successful without monitoring. For instance, if the objective is to pack ten items in 2 hours, check to determine if the assignment is halfway completed at the start of the first hour.

The Harada Method is a framework developed by Takashi Harada, a Japanese management consultant and author, to help individuals and organizations improve their performance and achieve their goals through self-reliance and continuous improvement. It is a holistic approach that combines personal development, leadership training, and process improvement methodologies such as Lean and Six Sigma.

The Harada Method is based on the principle of self-reliance, which means that individuals take ownership of their own development and actively work to improve their skills and knowledge. The framework consists of six steps:

1. Set a goal: The first step is to define a clear and specific goal that is challenging yet achievable.

2. Develop a plan: Next, individuals develop a plan that outlines the steps they will take to achieve their goal.

3. Acquire knowledge and skills: In this step, individuals identify the knowledge and skills they need to achieve their goal and actively work to acquire them.

4. Take action: Once individuals have the necessary knowledge and skills, they take action to implement their plan and work towards their goal.

5. Evaluate progress: Individuals regularly evaluate their progress towards their goal and make adjustments to their plan as needed.

6. Persevere: Finally, individuals persevere in the face of challenges and setbacks, using them as opportunities to learn and improve.

Organizations can use the Harada Method to improve their Lean Six Sigma implementation strategy by applying the same six steps to their improvement efforts. By setting clear goals, developing detailed plans, acquiring the necessary knowledge and skills, taking action, evaluating progress, and persevering, organizations can achieve measurable improvements in quality, efficiency, and customer satisfaction. The Harada Method can also help organizations develop a culture of continuous improvement and empower employees to take ownership of their own development and improvement.

The winner for this question is Anshul for the clear and detailed explanation of Harada Method.

 

Answer from Nunhuck is an interesting read on origins of this methodology.

Create an account or sign in to comment

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.