Businessman thinking for himself

The Biggest Waste in a Lean Manufacturing Environment Isn’t Material – It’s Untapped People

December 18, 2025

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By

Tim Christlieb

Manufacturers are obsessed with waste. Scrap. Downtime. Defects. All of it matters. But in my experience, the biggest waste is the one almost no one talks about: not using the knowledge and capability of your people.

The Manufacturing Waste You Don’t See

You walk into a plant and see the usual problems: quality issues, long changeovers, or low productivity. But behind those visible inefficiencies is a deeper issue: frontline employees who know exactly what’s wrong, but haven’t been asked to help fix it.

That’s the waste. Not broken machines. Not poor layouts. But hundreds of people whose insight and creativity are left on the table every day.

Why This Form of Manufacturing Waste Happens

In the West, we still operate with a top-down mindset. Leaders are expected to have the answers. That mindset kills engagement. Compare that with the Japanese approach, where leaders coach problem-solving and show respect by asking their people what they think.

What It Costs You

  • Slower problem-solving
  • Lower morale and retention
  • Missed improvement opportunities
  • A fragile system dependent on a few experts

If your CI program doesn’t involve the people doing the work, it’s cosmetic.

What to Do Instead

  1. Coach, don’t command.
    Leaders should teach employees how to think about problems—not just hand them solutions.
  2. Build the system.
    Tiered daily management, visual controls, and A3 thinking give teams the structure they need to improve locally.
  3. Get curious.
    Ask your operators: What slows you down? What frustrates you? What would you fix?

The Bottom Line

The best lean tools in the world won’t help if you’re not listening to the people closest to the work. Operational excellence isn’t just about structure—it’s about trust.

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