Lean Culture for The Construction Industry : Building Responsible and Committed Project Teams

Title: Lean Culture for The Construction Industry : Building Responsible and Committed Project Teams
Author: Gary Santorella
ISBN: 143983508X / 9781439835081
Format: Hard Cover
Pages: 267
Publisher: Productivity Press
Year: 2011
Availability: In Stock

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Given that the greatest risk factor on any project is manpower costs, problems resulting in delays, rework, or overtime will lower profits through increased labor costs. Most of these process-generated costs are fully preventable. An in-depth exploration of the application of Lean initiatives in the construction industry, Lean Culture for the Construction Industry: Building Responsible and Committed Project Teams addresses employee issues in terms of productivity and waste by applying behavioral psychology principles at both tactical and strategic levels.

Written by a veteran consultant in the construction field, the book draws a connection between how construction professionals act as leaders and how their attitude and behavior affect productivity and waste daily. He expands the notion of ethics beyond the simple litmus test of right and wrong, so team leaders can adopt professional and diplomatic attitudes and behaviors toward the implementation of Lean improvements.

Poorly devised organizational structures, unclear roles and responsibilities, unresolved interpersonal conflicts that are allowed to fester, and an overall lack of focus on improving team process—any of these attitudes and behaviors on a construction job can cripple productivity and result in waste and lost profit. This book demonstrates how, in a business intrinsically loaded with a wide range of people and personalities, ineffective management structures, and poor communication, Lean thinking can make the difference between a profitable, competitive construction team and mass inefficiencies and lost profitability.

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Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction
About The Author

Chapter 1 :
Lean Cuisine and Construction : The Benefits of a Food Industry Perspective
Chapter 2 : The Lean Team Challenge : The Invitation Test
Chapter 3 : Trust : Laying The Foundation
Chapter 4 : Is Your Attitude an Advantage?
Chapter 5 : Lean Ethics
Chapter 6 : Construction 101 : The Basics from a Lean Perspective
Chapter 7 : Execution and Overarching Philosophies
Chapter 8 : Lean Purpose
Chapter 9 : The Conflict Paradox : Encouraging Debate without Letting It Become Destructive
Chapter 10 : Establishing and Maintaining High Standards
Chapter 11 : Influencing Versus Motivating
Chapter 12 : Constructive Discipline (Knowing Where to Draw The Line)
Chapter 13 : Commitment and Accountability
Chapter 14 : Lean and Safe
Chapter 15 : Fine-Tuning The Line : Keeping your Fingers on The Pulse via Continuous Assessment
Chapter 16 : Stress and Anger Management (an External Perspective)
Chapter 17 : Generational Issues
Chapter 18 : Personality Testing : Don't Do It! (Better Ways to Know and Understand Your Staff)

Conclusion : The Human Condition
Bibliography
Index