Previous Page >> Despite the Recalls, Service Businesses Can Still Benefit from Adopting Toyota Practices
Source : Originally Published on Mar 04, 2010 in processexcellencenetwork
https://www.processexcellencenetwork.com/business-process-management-bpm/columns/despite-the-recalls-service-businesses-can-still-bA lot has being written about Toyota and its ability to wade through the current crisis. We all know about the range of complaints, from unintended acceleration to brake-failure resulting in the company having to recall 8 million cars, forcing Toyota to suspend its North American sales and production of eight models, including its best-selling Camry, after regulatory pressure. It has also been discovered that these problems have occurred in China, Europe, the Middle East and Latin America. All this led to Akio Toyoda, President of Toyota Motor Corporation, having to testify before Congress on February 24, 2010.
Analysts are already talking about the time frame it will take for Toyota to recover from the repercussions of the recall. Some are comparing Toyota’s ordeal to that of Volkswagen’s back in the mid-1980s when the Volkswagen Audi was linked to around 700 accidents and a few deaths. It took almost a decade and half for Volkswagen to get up to the same level of sales volume as it did in 1985 when the company sold about 74,061 cars; Volkswagen more precisely reached this mark in 2000 when it touched a sales volume of 80,372 cars.
The objective of this column is not to elaborate on the reasons why these problems happened but to assess how the adoption of Toyota practices will likely impact service companies. Some business leaders are already starting to tell me, in muffled voices, that is, that we need to be careful about implementing Toyota practices within a service business environment. As I am a great believer of Toyota’s quality practices, these comments disappoint me, and I fear that these remarks have cast a shadow on the power of Toyota practices for service businesses.
Lean is Here to Stay
My response to all these leaders is that you can have your views on the latest Toyota product recalls, but it would be myopic to abandon Toyota practices within your service businesses. Lean has a lot to provide to service companies, and we have just started to scratch the surface. Whatever time it may take for Toyota to recover, Lean is here to stay and its implementation is a must for service businesses keen to create a continuous improvement culture and create efficient performance-based processes that are in sync with results that customers value.
I can say with confidence that Toyota practices will be adopted by service companies knowingly or unknowingly to make their businesses better. Service companies may call these practices “Lean” or something else, and their need to adopt such practices may not necessarily arise from a love for Toyota or because of the practices’ Japanese lineage, but arise from a business compulsion to be trim, agile and fit.
Toyota Practices in Brief
So, what are these Toyota practices that service businesses are adopting in pursuit of operational excellence? While the list is large, I am highlighting a few of them:
As this is just a partial list, I look forward to hearing from the readers on practices and principles of Toyota that can enhance the performance of service businesses.
My Final Thoughts on Toyota Practices
Please do not shun Toyota practices because of the latest recalls. Toyota’s commitment to quality can be gauged from the fact that they have stopped production in the United States to make sure things are set right. I am confident that the company will rise like a phoenix only because of these practices that it has built over all these years.