For anyone interested in process improvement for either personal or professional applications, there are a lot of models out in the market today. Don’t be confused by all the variations because they all try to visualize the same basic concepts of continuous improvement thinking. There’s PDSA, DMAIC, IPER, GFSIR, SACIM, IAIR, and so on, but I’m still a fan of the classic PDCA (Plan-Do-Check-Act). It’s not a bad idea to look at all the different variations because one may resonate more than the others. Once the critical concepts are understood, it becomes more of a personal preference on what model we think works best with your situation.
PDCA is probably the simplest of the bunch and it really comes down to this:
The key to PDCA is that it’s a never-ending cycle because everything can be better. It’s also an intuitive cycle that we all follow whether we talk about it or not. Plan-Do is the proactive piece that gets the ball rolling and Check-Act is the reactive piece to keep the ball rolling the right way
With all the process improvement models out there, I’m surprised there aren’t more acronyms that spell out a real word so I though it would be fun to introduce one, but before that…
Risque Acronym Story (Feel free to skip this paragraph if easily offended): Once upon a time, I worked for a company that was taking suggestions on a name for a system we were working on to centralize knowledge between Plastics Engineering departments across North America. The system would allow for efficient sharing of things we learned from our problem countermeasure and process improvement activities. For fun, I tossed “Plastics Engineering Networked Information System” into the ring, expecting it to be be cut off right away, but it made it past the initial screening, and I learned that not everyone has the same acronym obsession that I did. As curious as I was to see how long it would be before someone noticed, I opted to point out the unfortunate acronym and pulled it out of contention before things got messy. The original point of this story was that acronyms which spell words are more fun, but the more inspiring outcome came from witnessing firsthand that people of different ages, beliefs and backgrounds could still all come together and giggle like innocent school children in the face of shameless immaturity, so there’s hope for us yet.
WHALE is a slightly less controversial acronym that stands for What-How-Act-Learn-Evolve. WHALE’s only purpose is to provide a process improvement acronym that spells a real word. Please note that it’s basically still PDCA:
Whatever improvement acronym we decide to use is not important as recognizing the importance of continually going through the improvement cycles. Even if we’re happy with the status quo, the unfortunate reality is that there is no status quo. The world is constantly changing and we need to be acting continuously and purposefully just to keep up.