December 8, 2025Dec 8 Most teams stay forever in “improve what exists.” But high-performance companies consciously switch between three modes:1️⃣ Stabilize: Make it predictable.Standardize, remove variation, create flow.Without stability, nothing else works.2️⃣ Reinvent: When improvement is not enough.Challenge assumptions.Rethink architecture.Redesign for what the system should become — not what it has been.3️⃣ Scale: Make it repeatable.Mechanisms, clarity, modularity, customer-centricity.This is how breakthroughs grow instead of collapsing under pressure.The real leadership capability today?Knowing which mode the system needs right now — and having the courage to shift.Engagement Question:👉 Which mode is your organization strongest in? Which mode is the hardest?
December 10, 2025Dec 10 Strongest: Stabilize We are world-class at it. Aerospace forces you to be: zero defects, full traceability, AS13100 (AS9100 + AS9145) audits that feel like a colonoscopy with PowerPoint. We can take the most chaotic supplier disaster, lock it down with control plans, PFMEA, 8D, layered audits, and make it run like a Swiss watch at 99.97 % quality in three months. Visitors walk out saying “this place is scary clean and disciplined.”Hardest (by a mile): Reinvent We suck at killing our darlings.Real example that still hurts: We have a 25-year-old manual final-assembly line for landing-gear actuators. It is stable, profitable, certified, and produces 180 units/month with 100 % on-time delivery.Everyone knows it cannot scale to the 500 units/month the new electric-aircraft programmes need in 2028. The fixtures are hard-steel monuments, the work instructions are 180-page printed books, and the layout is literally cast in the concrete floor.For three years we have run kaizen events, SMED projects, digital work instructions, cobot pilots… and we are still stuck at ~210 units/month with heroic overtime.The honest answer is: the line needs to be thrown in the scrap bin and replaced with a fully automated, modular, robot-tended cell.But nobody dares to pull the trigger because:CAPEX €38 million18-month lead time on the new machinesCertification riskCurrent line is still making money todayThe plant manager’s bonus is tied to this year’s EBITDA, not 2029 volumeSo we keep “stabilizing” a dying architecture and call weekend overtime “operational excellence.”We are amazing at making the horse faster. We are terrified of shooting the horse and buying a rocket.That’s why Reinvent is our weakest mode — and why the new entrants with clean-sheet factories are going to eat our lunch in five years.
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