Learn more and apply for the November 2026 cohort of my Japan Leadership Experience: https://kbjanderson.com/japantrip/
What does it really take to sustain a culture of continuous improvement – through pressure for results, across generations, and into an era of AI?
In this final episode of my three-part series with John Shook, one of the most influential leaders and thinkers in the global lean community, we turned to the questions on your mind.
Before we sat down to record, I asked listeners to submit your questions. We cover four of them specifically here, though many others were addressed in Parts 1 and 2, and together they highlight the tensions change leaders and executives face every day.
At the end, as we promised in Part 2, John shares his parting reflections and advice for all of us leading transformation to create people-centered learning cultures. It’s not just what we should stop doing, it’s what we need to continue. Starting with ourselves.
If you haven’t listened to episodes 74 and 75 yet, start there first as you won’t want to miss hearing this conversation in full.
You’ll Learn:
- Why leaders should be patient for results but impatient for action
- Why getting to the assumptions that underlie your principles and values is where the real work of culture change begins
- How aligning around the real problem to solve helps close the gap across generations and perspectives
- What the original intention of jidoka — separating machine work from human work — can teach us about navigating AI and keeping technology in service of people
- The real purpose of kaizen and continuous improvement
ABOUT MY GUEST:
John Shook spent eleven years with Toyota in Japan and the U.S., where he helped transfer the Toyota Production System globally. He later served as President of the Lean Enterprise Institute and Chairman of the Lean Global Network.
John is the co-author of the award-winning books Learning to See and Managing to Learn, and wrote the foreword to my book Learning to Lead, Leading to Learn. As an industrial anthropologist, he brings a perspective that connects culture, systems, and practice to bridge deep thinking with real-world application.
IMPORTANT LINKS:
- Full episode show notes: ChainOfLearning.com/76
- Connect with John Shook: lean.org/about-lei/senior-advisors-staff/john-shook/
- Follow me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kbjanderson
- Subscribe to my newsletter: kbjanderson.com/newsletter
- Check out my website for resources and working together: KBJAnderson.com
- Join us on the Japan Leadership Experience: KBJAnderson.com/japantrip
- Purchase a copy of, “Learning to Lead, Leading to Learn,”: https://kbjanderson.com/learning-to-lead/
TIMESTAMPS FOR THIS EPISODE:
02:28 [Listener Question] How do you balance patience with action?
04:06 Avoiding solution jumping and analysis paralysis
05:20 [Listener Question] What will matter most for the next generation of organizations?
07:21 Why underlying assumptions matter more than artifacts
08:28 The deeper level of hansei and reflection
08:53 [Listener Question] How do you bridge generations without slowing improvement?
10:43 Quick PDCA vs. long-cycle learning
11:23 Aligning people around shared purpose
13:56 [Listener Question] In our age of AI, how do we stay true to jidoka’s original intent, separating machine work from human work?
14:12 AI, jidoka, and protecting human work
15:23 Four questions to navigate uncertainty
16:17 Why respect for people still matters in AI
17:15 Jidoka beyond “automation with a human touch”
18:54 Curiosity, experiments, and learning with AI
19:30 The promise and risk of AI thinking for us
22:08 PDCA beyond engineering and problem solving
25:39 The purpose of kaizen is to do more kaizen
26:18 Creating conditions for people to think and grow
27:00 Shifting from leading change to creating conditions
Learn more and apply for the November 2026 cohort of my Japan Leadership Experience: https://kbjanderson.com/japantrip/
