32 • Part I
Shewhart cycle—plan, do, check, act—popularized by W.
Edwards Deming,
but accelerated to warp speed.”
It is only through the swarming of ever smaller problems discovered ever
earlier in the life cycle that we can deflect problems before a catastrophe
occurs. In other words, when the nuclear reactor melts down, it is already too
late to avert worst outcomes.
To enable fast feedback in the technology value stream, we must create the
equivalent of an Andon cord and the related swarming response. This requires
that we also create
the culture that makes it safe, and even encouraged, to
pull the Andon cord when something goes wrong, whether it is when a pro-
duction incident occurs or when errors occur earlier in the value stream, such
as when someone introduces a change that breaks our continuous build or
test processes.
When conditions trigger an Andon cord pull, we swarm to solve the problem
and prevent the introduction of new work until the issue has been resolved.
†
This provides fast feedback for everyone in the value stream (especially the
person who caused the system to fail), enables us to quickly isolate and diag-
nose the problem, and prevents further complicating
factors that can obscure
cause and effect.
Preventing the introduction of new work enables continuous integration and
deployment, which is single-piece flow in the technology value stream. All
changes that pass our continuous build and integration tests are deployed
into production, and any changes that cause any tests to fail trigger our Andon
cord and are swarmed until resolved.
KEEP PUSHING QUALITY CLOSER TO THE SOURCE
We may inadvertently perpetuate unsafe systems of work due to the way we
respond to accidents and incidents. In complex systems, adding more inspec-
tion steps and approval processes actually increases the likelihood of future
failures. The effectiveness of approval processes decreases
as we push decision-
making further away from where the work is performed. Doing so not only
lowers the quality of decisions but also increases our cycle time, thus decreasing
†
Astonishingly, when the number of Andon cord pulls drop, plant managers will actually decrease
the tolerances to get an increase in the number of Andon cord pulls in order to continue to
enable more learnings and improvements and to detect ever-weaker failure signals.
Promo
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for
distribution
or
sale
Chapter 3 • 33
the strength of the feedback
between cause and effect, and reducing our ability
to learn from successes and failures.
‡
This can be seen even in smaller and less complex systems. When top-down,
bureaucratic command and control systems become ineffective, it is usually
because the variance between “who should do something” and “who is actually
doing something” is too large, due to insufficient clarity and timeliness.
Examples of ineffective quality controls include:
•
Requiring another team to complete tedious,
error-prone, and
manual tasks that could be easily automated and run as needed
by the team who needs the work performed
•
Requiring approvals from busy people who are distant from the
work, forcing them to make decisions without an adequate knowl-
edge of the work or the potential implications, or to merely rubber
stamp
their approvals
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