
Definition
Kaizen, Japanese for change for the better, is a philosophy of continuous improvement built on small, incremental changes made by everyone in an organisation, every day, rather than occasional large projects. It was popularised by Masaaki Imai in 1986 and is a pillar of the Toyota Production System.
Kaizen is both a mindset and a set of practices. As a mindset, it holds that no process is ever perfect and that frontline workers, not just managers, are the people best placed to spot waste. As a method, it ranges from suggestions made at a single workstation to structured kaizen events that improve a process over a few days.
Kaizen works by making improvement a routine part of daily work instead of a separate initiative. Most kaizen activity follows the same underlying loop, whether it is one operator’s idea or a week-long team event. The typical stages are:
Because each step is small, change is low-risk and reversible, and the gains compound over time. The loop mirrors the PDCA cycle, which gives Kaizen its scientific structure.
Kaizen gives manufacturing teams a way to improve continuously without halting production for large, disruptive projects. Small daily gains accumulate into significant productivity, quality, and safety improvements, while engaging the workforce keeps the changes durable.
ISO 9001:2015 clause 10.3 requires organisations to continually improve their quality management system, and Kaizen is the most widely used cultural practice for meeting that requirement. The Lean Enterprise Institute treats Kaizen as the engine of lean, the activity that turns standardised work into a baseline for the next improvement.
Kaizen and kaikaku are two complementary modes of change in lean thinking. Kaizen is incremental: many small improvements, low cost, low risk, driven from the shop floor. Kaikaku is radical: a large, planned transformation such as redesigning a line or adopting a new technology, usually led by management. Most organisations need both. Kaikaku resets the baseline, then Kaizen improves on it continuously until the next step change is justified.
Many small improvements made continuously by the people who do the work. Low cost, low risk, and reversible. It refines the existing process rather than replacing it.
A single large, planned transformation, usually led by management. Higher cost and higher risk. It resets the baseline that Kaizen then improves on day by day.
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