『Why They Fail ... and the Simple Key to Success!』のカバーアート

Why They Fail ... and the Simple Key to Success!

Why They Fail ... and the Simple Key to Success!

著者: Kevin Clay Master Black Belt
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Tired of watching continuous improvement efforts crash and burn? So are we. "Why They Fail" dives headfirst into the brutal truth behind failed Lean Six Sigma deployments, exposing the myths, the mistakes, and the outright absurdities that plague organizations worldwide. Forget the sugar-coated success stories—we're here to dissect the disasters, from executives who think training is optional to lone Green Belts drowning in unrealistic expectations. But it's not all doom and gloom. We'll also reveal the surprisingly simple key to unlocking sustainable success: ditching the quick fixes and building a rock-solid foundation. Buckle up, because this podcast is a no-holds-barred, reality check that will transform the way you think about continuous improvement.© 2025 Six Sigma Development Solutions, Inc. マネジメント マネジメント・リーダーシップ 出世 就職活動 教育 経済学
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  • From Blackhawk Cockpits to Real Lean Six Sigma Success
    2026/06/24

    Over 90% of corporate deployments fail within eighteen months. One of the most common reasons is the creation of continuous improvement silos. When process improvement is locked inside a single department or treated as a leadership checklist, cultural transformation becomes impossible.

    In this episode of the Why They Fail Podcast, Kevin Clay sits down with Emilio Natalio, a retired military aviator and seasoned aviation safety officer. Emilio shares his journey from piloting Blackhawk helicopters to managing complex business processes. Throughout the conversation, they explore how leadership teams unknowingly restrict their own growth. Instead of building a unified team, they create artificial barriers that prevent value from flowing across the organization.

    Breaking Down Continuous Improvement Silos

    Continuous improvement silos form quickly when deployments lack an underlying infrastructure. For example, many companies train a single employee and expect that person to single-handedly fix everything. As a result, these newly certified belts often end up acting like corporate police officers. Frontline operators become defensive. Communication breaks down completely.

    To overcome this, organizations must dismantle their continuous improvement silos and build shared operational sidewalks. Emilio discusses his unique approach to teaching Lean Six Sigma through an interactive, choose-your-own-adventure style process map. This methodology focuses on real-world project decision-making. Consequently, practitioners learn how to navigate scope creep and sub-optimization by looking directly at the data rather than guessing.

    Shifting From Paper Belts to True Cultural Impact

    Another critical failure point is the rise of "paper belts." These are individuals who complete short online courses and pass simple tests without gaining any practical project experience. However, real process improvement requires hands-on battle scars and direct mentoring.

    Furthermore, organizational excellence can only be sustained when decisions are based on objective metrics. Subjective leadership agendas destroy deployment momentum. Therefore, eliminating continuous improvement silos means establishing clear, visible key performance indicators that cascade all the way down to frontline operators.

    Additionally, building a collaborative project hopper gives every employee the power to identify operational waste. When you capture the Voice of the Operator and align improvement projects directly with primary business targets, you build a sustainable house of excellence that delivers long-term, measurable value.

    Key Takeaways from this Podcast:

    High-stakes military aviation safety principles parallel true Lean Six Sigma methodologies. Training a single employee to save the world without support infrastructure sets them up for failure. Online-only click-through courses create ineffective "paper belts" who lack practical deployment experience.

    Business metrics and key performance indicators must be clear, well-defined, and visible to everyone.

    Capturing the Voice of the Operator is essential to break down internal division and sustain changes.

    <... Chapters
    • (00:00:00) - Why They Fail: Continuous Improvement
    • (00:01:06) - Why They Fail: The Process of Continuous Improvement
    • (00:04:23) - Have You Had Fun Working In the Army?
    • (00:06:43) - Lean 6 Sigma Training for Blackhawk Pilots
    • (00:08:00) - Choose Your Own Adventure: The Lean 6 Sigma Journey
    • (00:12:28) - White belt vs. yellow belt
    • (00:17:15) - Green Belt vs Black Belt Projects
    • (00:23:05) - Build the Safety Culture
    • (00:24:53) - How to Improve a Process?
    • (00:30:08) - Culture and the continuous improvement
    • (00:34:05) - How to Collaborate on Projects
    • (00:38:47) - The Making of a Documentary
    • (00:39:03) - CMS: Why They Fail & the Simple Key to Success
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    41 分
  • Gen Z Grit: How Cheer Stunts Breed Future CEOs
    2026/06/15
    Gen Z Grit: How Cheer Stunts Breed Future CEOs

    Welcome to another episode of Why They Fail. In this episode, we tackle an exciting angle on organizational health: gen z leadership development. Many corporate leaders wonder how the next generation will handle complex business dynamics. However, looking at the discipline required in competitive youth environments reveals a clear trend. This episode explores how elite competitive cheer practices correlate deeply with standard work, cross-training, and system optimization.

    Our host, Kevin Clay, Master Black Belt, sits down with thirteen-year-old elite athlete Claire Clay. Claire is a high-achieving student and the current Junior Miss Emerald Coast. She steps away from the pageant stage to pull back the curtain on her Level 4.2 Senior Elite cheer team. Together, they discuss why corporate teams drop the ball, while youth teams consistently hit their marks.

    SOPs and Generation Z Leadership Development

    Many companies struggle to sustain their continuous improvement initiatives because they rely on a single superstar to save the day. Consequently, when that person leaves or gets sick, the entire system crashes. In contrast, Claire explains an unspoken rule enforced by her coaches: every single stunt group must be capable of switching out athletes seamlessly.

    This strict focus on interchangeability is a perfect real-world application of process capability and standardization. In order to achieve this level of performance, the team removes all tribal knowledge. Every base must hold the foot exactly the same way, and every back spot must utilize identical grips. Therefore, the only thing that changes is the face you are looking at. This standard work creates deep muscle memory, allowing the team to perform under immense pressure.

    Systemic Flexibility and Gen Z Leadership Development

    True resilience requires comprehensive cross-training. On Claire's team, athletes are systematically trained to manage multiple roles. This flexibility prevents the entire operation from crashing during major competitions. In addition, when technical breakdowns occur, these young leaders do not waste time blaming individual shortfalls. Instead, they leverage structured communication to look at the process itself.

    By evaluating whether a dropped stunt was a breakdown in timing, standard technique, or communication, they naturally practice root cause analysis. This mature approach to problem-solving shifts the culture away from finger-pointing. As a result, the entire team absorbs the feedback and shares the accountability. This operational mindset demonstrates how early exposure to structured systems accelerates generation alpha leadership development, preparing them to guide complex corporations in the future.

    Key Takeaways from this Podcast:

    Gen Z is building an elite foundation for future corporate leadership through high-level athletic systems. Process standardization means refining a technique so thoroughly that any qualified team member can step in and execute. Comprehensive cross-training creates a resilient, crash-proof operational matrix capable of handling sudden disruptions. Sustainable teamwork requires abandoning individu...

    Chapters
    • (00:00:00) - Why They Fail
    • (00:00:52) - Meet Claire Clay
    • (00:04:35) - Miss Florida Cheer
    • (00:06:33) - Why Every Stunt Group Should Be the Same
    • (00:13:35) - How to Organize Your Time in Cheer
    • (00:19:07) - Why They Fail
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    20 分
  • Inside Amazon: Why Process Engineers Are Guides, Not Sages
    2026/06/03
    Inside Amazon: Why Process Engineers Are Guides, Not Sages

    Most companies build their continuous improvement programs the wrong way. They train a single green belt or black belt and expect that one person to fix everything. However, studying Six Sigma principles in Amazon's operations reveals a completely different model. At Amazon, process engineers do not own the solutions. Instead, they build the capability for frontline teams to find the answers themselves.

    In this episode of the Why They Fail Podcast, Kevin Clay sits down with Mariam Abdalmasih, Senior Process Improvement Engineer for London Fulfillment Operations at Amazon. Mariam brings nearly a decade of cross-functional experience across automotive, food manufacturing, and retail logistics. As a result, she offers a rare inside look at how a structured metric environment functions at genuinely massive scale.

    HOW SIX SIGMA PRINCIPLES IN AMAZON'S OPERATIONS ACTUALLY WORK

    Amazon treats process excellence as a foundational part of daily operations. It is not a standalone department. It is not a temporary initiative. Therefore, continuous improvement is built directly into the operational infrastructure from day one.

    During the conversation, Mariam explains how corporate metrics cascade down to visual display screens on the fulfillment floor. Every individual operator can see exactly how their work connects to larger corporate performance indicators. Furthermore, Amazon relies on an independent system of Gemba walks to verify those numbers on the ground. This prevents data from being analyzed in silos. Instead, operations and process safety teams work together in real time to validate what the dashboards are actually showing.

    SHIFTING FROM SAGES TO FRONTLINE ENABLERS

    A major theme of this episode is how Amazon develops its organizational culture around enabling rather than dictating. Mariam outlines how prioritizing leadership capability in hiring allows continuous improvement professionals to serve as true guides. Consequently, ownership of improvement stays exactly where it belongs: with the subject matter experts on the floor.

    Additionally, the episode unpacks Amazon's "one-way door vs. two-way door" decision-making framework. This operational model actively encourages calculated risk-taking. It empowers frontline teams to make faster, independent improvements while keeping the customer experience completely protected.

    Understanding Six Sigma principles in Amazon's operations means understanding that sustainability comes from infrastructure first, not individual practitioners.

    KEY TAKEAWAYS

    Applying these principles is what separates a lasting continuous improvement culture from one that fades within 18 months.

    First, process improvement practitioners must act as frontline enablers, guiding teams rather than dictating solutions. Second, metrics must cascade from corporate targets down to visual management systems on the floor so every operator understands their impact. Third, data trends and control chart signals must always be verified firsthand through structured Gemba walks. Fourth, evaluating actions as reversible two-way doors empowers teams to move fa...

    Chapters
    • (00:00:00) - Why Continuous Improvement Efforts Fail
    • (00:01:09) - Why They Fail: Continuous Improvement at Amazon
    • (00:02:46) - Alex Jones on Continuous Improvement at Amazon
    • (00:10:25) - Six Sigma vs Lean: What's the Difference?
    • (00:13:15) - Six Sigma in Amazon
    • (00:18:34) - Six Sigma and the Chaos of Operations
    • (00:19:56) - Does the Continuous Improvement Strategy Help?
    • (00:27:04) - Continuous Improvement: The Process-based culture
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    30 分
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