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Comedian Al Murray recounts a run-in with industrial-scale stupidity: "Car insurance company rang, without having sent me a renewal letter, asking for money. Made them answer security questions." In the same vein, tell us your stories about pointless paperwork and corporate quarter-wits
( , Thu 23 Feb 2012, 12:13)
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Expensive, off-the-shelf management training/strategy/consultancy bullshit that anyone with half a brain could dissect and dismiss, but has somehow converted many of the highest earners in the country to total zealots. Things like:
Lean
Six Sigma
Success! in the workplace
Six Steps
Also, associated pseudo-science / defunct science bullshit that goes hand in hand with the above, including Myers-Briggs personality tests and Mumford & Honey learning styles.
Show me the fucking evidence you doofuses. This shit costs the taxpayer millions, and is the starkest and bleakest evidence of the decline in education standards in this country. David Hume would spin in his fucking grave.
//rant over
( , Thu 23 Feb 2012, 13:50, 8 replies)
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And in primary schools, fecking Brain Gym. I'd like to spend half an hour with the tosser who made that bullshit up - just me, him and a rounders bat from the sports cupboard.
www.badscience.net/category/brain-gym/
Read it and bloody weep.
( , Thu 23 Feb 2012, 16:07, closed)
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Brain Gym is still in some (mostly private) schools, you know.
( , Thu 23 Feb 2012, 16:25, closed)
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and are actual principles and operating standards for said industry, I'm really not sure how they could be applied in management strategy.
( , Thu 23 Feb 2012, 16:09, closed)
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I can see how Lean might actually work in manufacturing - it actually originates with Toyota. Although I can't help but think that Toyota one day said "hey - couldn't we make more money if we got into this management consultancy lark?" and rattled off some semi-common sense piffle.
( , Thu 23 Feb 2012, 16:24, closed)
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* Identify slow or inefficient process.
* Have a look at what you're actually doing to get the process done.
* Is there unnecessary movement, waiting, overproduction, wastage etc.?
* If so, what countermeasures could reasonably be used to avoid said movement, waiting etc.?
* Change process, implement countermeasures, re-evaluate, repeat as necessary.
Over the last few years they reckon it's saved the company hundreds of thousands of pounds in wasted time alone.
( , Thu 23 Feb 2012, 16:33, closed)
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I am now a process engineer (need to update my page, mind).
I get paid for understanding Lean & Six Sigma. They're not a Bible but they are useful tools.
( , Fri 24 Feb 2012, 17:00, closed)
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LEAN and six-sigma came out of manufacturing but they have principles which can be applied to all sorts of things. I've actually advised an NHS manager on how they can apply some of the stuff looking at finding the optimum time to allow for a first GP appointment to reduce the need for second appointments.
Don't worry, I'm not a consultant! I just find this stuff very useful for my job and was having a chat with someone else who was interested in the subject but couldn't quite see how to apply it.
( , Tue 28 Feb 2012, 15:58, closed)
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They're working under cutting edge management strategy bullshit which hasn't yet been found out. They public sector is way behind, because they're working under outdated management strategy bullshit that has.
The end result, of course, is that most managers - private or public -still let other people do their thinking for them, and hardly any of them think just talking to their staff is a good idea.
( , Fri 24 Feb 2012, 12:34, closed)
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