The Top Lean Books
Today you can find a large selection of books on almost any subject and Lean Management is no different. What we have tried to do here is find 12 of the best Lean Management books that focus on the key principles and ideas behind Lean.
These are books are for the general reader with an interest in change management, business improvement and business management.
So why have we selected these books?
These books are what we would recommend to our students, clients and anyone else who is interested in understanding Lean. And we would recommend them in this order – starting with two books that should turn on the light blub for any business professional before the “The Simplicity of Lean” which is focused on how to implement the basis of a Lean culture.
This selection of the top 12 Best Management Books covers the traditional Lean Manufacturin plus Lean in Service, Lean Strategy, Lean Startup and how applicable Lean is in today’s society from a Leadership and overall management perspective.
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Lean Manufacturing Books & Lean Service Books
1 - Lean Thinking - Banish Waste And Create Wealth In Your Corporation
by Womack & Jones
While many refer to The Machine That Changed the World as the foundation of the Lean Revolution, I would still, without doubt, recommend Lean Thinking as the best introduction to Lean. It’s more accessible and while written initial in 1996, it was updated in 2002. The examples throughout the book remain meaningful and its a great mind opener for the world of lean. Definitely, the best introductory read for anyone interested in learning more about lean.
2 - Lean Solutions: How Companies and Customers Can Create Value and Wealth Together
by Womack & Jones
After Lean Thinking, Lean Solution is a great book that takes Lean thinking to the next level and begins to review actual industries and identifying the gap between customers and providers. With greater choice and greater flexibility, it highlights how providers need to be adding greater and greater value to customers. There is a great chapter on the automotive sector which has almost become visionary.
3 - NEW - The Simplicity of Lean
by Philip Holt
Initially, I had some reservations about this book but I must say that it is one of the most practical Lean books I have read. The way the book builds up the approach across Culture, Kaizen, Projects and beyond is excellent and very few books have managed to capture the practical implementation of Lean. It is almost a Lean Playbook and it has grown on us to be one of our favorites.
4 - The Toyota Way: 14 Management Principles from the World's Greatest Manufacturer
by Jeffrey Liker
The Toyota Way was the first general readership book that looked at the concepts, management principles and philosophy behind the success of Toyota. These 14 Management Principles have stood the test of time since publication and today, these principles are as relevant as before. (Learn more about the 14 Management Principles).
The best book on the Toyota Production System
BONUS - If you are studying, then buy this book!
by Quentin Brook
Now, WARNING, this is a technical book which I would recommend for anyone doing their Green Belt or Black Belt training and particularly useful for candidates who are running DMAIC project. The book is structured around DMAIC and with the practical examples, downloadable data sets recently updated screenshots from Minitab, its a great companion.
5 - Toyota Kata: Managing People for Improvement, Adaptiveness and Superior Results
by Mike Rother
The Toyota Kata takes a look at the ideas behind the way Toyota managers it’s people and how it develops the best out of its people. It takes a look at the employee-management routines which underpins so much of the continuous improvement cycle. It takes a look at Improvement Kata and Coaching Kata – routines to leverage the best from our processes and our people.
6 - The Lean Startup: How Constant Innovation Creates Radically Successful Businesses
by Eric Ries
In the Lean Startup, Eric Ries applies the concepts of Lean to innovation identifying why so many companies fail and how much of this is preventable. He highlights how the first step of any innovation is identifying what customers not only value but what they are willing to pay for. The idea is to learn fast by testing through the minimal viable product.
7 - The Machine That Changed the World
by Womack & Jones
The Machine That Changed the World was the catalyst for Lean Production as the authors conducted a groundbreaking study and analysis of Toyota and the entire Lean Production system. Even today, you can see how Ford & GM struggle but Toyota continue to grow from strength to strength. This was the first book that coined the term “Lean” and often seen as the starting point of Lean in Europe and America.
8 - Toyota Production System: Beyond Large-Scale Production
by Taiichi Ohno
Written by Taiichi Ohno, who many consider being the inventor of the Toyota Production System, this books covers the key concepts of waste, Just In Time thinking and looks at the overall Lean Production approach. “All you are doing is looking at the timeline … from the moment the customer gives an on order to the point when we collect the case. And we are reducing that timeline by removing non-value-added wastes.
9 - The Toyota Way to Continuous Improvement: Linking Strategy and Operational Excellence to Achieve Superior Performance
by Jeffrey Liker
The Toyota Way to Continuous Improvement was the winner of the 2012 Shingo Research and Professional Publications Award. TIn this book Liker helps its reader develop a vision for continuous improvement within their organisation and begin to plot a path to turn the companies vision into a measurable reality. A great book which links the core concepts with actionable ideas to start your companies lean journey.
10 - Design for Operational Excellence: A Breakthrough Strategy for Business Growth
by Kevin Duggan
Organisations do not go on a lean journey to drive our waste or to go through the continuous improvement cycles, they implement Lean because they want to achieve Operational Excellence argues Duggan, and he may be correct. This is a great book for the helicopter view of what happens or what could happen when Lean works and is implemented well.
11 - The Lean Toolbox: The Essential Guide to Lean Transformation
by John Bicheno & Matthias Holweg
This is not a book you pick up and read for the beginning to end, but something you delve into as you need to or when you a particular questions. It covers the tools, system, and principles of Lean. While it covers the tools with excellent examples that are well written, it also covers The Lean Philosophy and discusses a number of Lean Transformation frameworks for organisations. I reviewed this against the 4th Edition which I own.
12 - Learning to See: Value Stream Mapping to Add Value and Eliminate Muda (Lean Enterprise Institute)
by Mike Rother
This is not a book you are going to read from start to end. Its more a step by step guide on how to value stream. If you are going to do any value stream, I would suggest that this is read in advance and kept by your side during the sessions. It’s a great resource to help and will help get a much better result.