Work Smarter-December Newsletter 2025

by | Dec 30, 2025 | Education

A Monthly Note from Utah Lean Six Sigma Training Center

This monthly note is designed to respect your time and sharpen your thinking: one useful idea, one real-world insight, and one small nudge toward better work.

One Useful Idea – Continuous Improvement Loves Small Cycles

One of the quiet lies we tell ourselves is that improvement requires huge effort, energy, and perfect timing. Lean thinking disagrees.

At its core, continuous improvement is built on short cycles of reflection and adjustment. Plan something small. Try it. Check what happened. Adjust. No fanfare. No heroics. Just progress.

The most common mistake organizations make is waiting for “the big reset”. The new system, the new year, the new initiative. In reality, improvement compounds fastest when learning cycles are short and frequent.

This quiet week between Christmas and New Year’s is a perfect example. It’s calm, reflective, and mostly free of meetings. In Lean terms, it’s an unusually good moment to check and adjust before the next plan begins.

Lessons for Real Work – Why Kaizens Loves the Calendar Turn

New Year’s resolutions tend to fail because they aim for transformation instead of
calibration.

What actually works is asking better questions:

• What caused friction this year?
• Where did work slow down for no good reason?
• Which problems kept repeating?

In addition to the normal strategic planning, one organization we worked with tasked each leader at every level with picking one recurring annoyance their team had lived with all year. After some calibration (remember: no random acts of improvement!), they focused on fixing those problems. No banners. No slogans. Just relief. That’s everyday kaizen in its natural habitat: modest, practical, and quietly effective.

As you head into 2026, resist the urge to overhaul everything. Improvement doesn’t need a resolution. It needs attention

A Simple Action to Try

Before the year officially transitions to 2026, ask this question in your next conversation with
subject matter experts or planning meeting:

“What’s one thing we should stop accepting as normal next year?”

Listen carefully (remember: go see, ask why, show respect!). The answers may be very specific and very fixable.

Pass It On!

If you know someone who would benefit from practical, no-nonsense Lean training, we appreciate the introduction, and we show that
appreciation with cash.

• Lean Foundations (Yellow Belt): $20
• Lean Leadership (Green Belt): $50
• Lean Enterprise (Black Belt): $100

Friends, colleagues, and family members all count. This is our simple way of saying thank you.

From the desk of Craig Johnson

Founder and Chief Educator

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