EPISODE · Nov 28, 2023 · 27 MIN
The Cleaner Who Knew More Than the CEO: The Power of Continuous Improvement
from A Job Done Well - Making Work Better · host Jimmy Barber and James Lawther
This week on A Job Done Well, Jimmy Barber and James Lawther dismantle the myth that continuous improvement is just for process geeks. Using examples from British Cycling’s marginal gains to the chaos of NHS operating theatres, they reveal how small, strategic tweaks—backed by data, observation, and a willingness to challenge convention—can transform performance. No buzzwords, no grand transformation programmes, just practical, often counterintuitive ways to get better at what you already do.The hosts expose the pitfalls that derail improvement: the HiPPO (Highest Paid Person’s Opinion) syndrome, the fear of looking stupid, and the delusion that senior leaders always know best. They share war stories—like the sales team whose performance skyrocketed when the worst performers were given the hardest leads (yes, you read that right), or the cleaner whose passion for her job uncovered systemic inefficiencies. The message? The best ideas often come from the people doing the work, not the ones sitting in boardrooms.With their signature dry wit, Jimmy and James also explore how to learn from unlikely sources—whether it’s Formula 1 pit crews or fire brigades—and why customer complaints are a gift, not a nuisance. If you’ve ever rolled your eyes at a “transformation initiative” or wondered why your boss insists on reinventing the wheel, this episode is your antidote.Five Key Points:Ego is the enemy: Improvement starts with admitting you don’t have all the answers. The HiPPO (Highest Paid Person’s Opinion) is often the biggest barrier to progress.Small isn’t trivial: Marginal gains add up—just ask British Cycling, who turned 110 years of failure into five Tour de France wins in six years by obsessing over tiny improvements.Data trumps intuition: The best sales strategy? Give your top performers the easiest leads and let the rest focus on the tough ones. The data proved it worked—even if it felt backwards.Get off your chair: The best insights come from watching the work, not reading reports. Sir John Harvey-Jones stood in an empty NHS operating theatre and uncovered a simple but crippling bottleneck: no one showed up on time.Your people know the answers: A cleaner’s frustration over her trolley revealed systemic iGot a question - get in touch. Click here.
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The Cleaner Who Knew More Than the CEO: The Power of Continuous Improvement
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