Tailored coaching and bespoke training that turns Lean theory into everyday practice. Your team owns the improvement — and keeps building on it long after we've gone.
Most businesses we coach have smart people who want to improve. The problem isn't will — it's method. These are the things leaders most often say when they reach out.
"Improvement only happens when I'm in the room. The moment I step out, it goes back to how it was."
"My team has experience. They've been here years. But when something goes wrong they just... work around it. They don't dig."
"We had a consultant come in two years ago. The slides were great. The improvements lasted about a quarter. We're back where we started."
"I don't want to keep paying consultants. I want my team to be the consultants — for ourselves, and for whoever joins next."
Real capability develops in three stages — first you follow the method, then you adapt it to your context, then you teach the next team. We borrow this from the Toyota Way, where it's called Shu-Ha-Ri.
The team learns the methods exactly as taught — A3 problem-solving, 5 Whys, value-stream mapping, structured root-cause analysis. The goal at this stage isn't creativity. It's fluency in the form, before improvising.
The team starts seeing why each step exists — and what to bend, skip, or extend for their own situation. Coaching shifts from instruction to discussion. Methods become tools they apply, not rules they follow.
Your most capable people are now coaches themselves. They run workshops, mentor others, and propagate the method across the business. They create new approaches when the situation calls for it. The improvement engine has gone internal.
Two illustrative scenarios showing what kind of work this looks like and what kind of capability typically develops. Real programs are shaped to your team and the problems they're solving.
Senior leaders sponsor improvement but don't lead it. Improvement happens to the team, not through it. We coach 3–6 senior leaders one-on-one, helping them shift from giving answers to asking the right structured questions — and run their own A3 cycles on real business problems.
Smart, experienced team but no shared method. Same issues recur. A 12-week program: workshops on A3, 5 Whys, and value-stream mapping; weekly coaching cycles where the team brings real problems and we coach them through structured solving.
Most coaching engagements begin as a focused program — a workshop series, a capability build, or a train-the-trainer rollout. The capability work that follows tends to grow into an ongoing partnership over time.
*About these ranges. These are illustrative scenarios drawn from typical capability-building work — not specific client results. Real programs are shaped to your team's starting capability and the business problems they're solving.
Start with a free 30-minute intro call. If it's a fit, we'll schedule a 1-hour site visit to walk your operation together — and from there we'll scope a tailored partnership.