一揽子参与:瑞典员工的精益经验取决于他们如何参与。

Mikael Brännmark, Richard J Holden
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引用次数: 19

摘要

背景:精益生产是瑞典和全球制造业和服务业的主导方法。关于精益对员工影响的研究很少,而且相互矛盾。目的:精益对员工的影响可能不是统一的。本文研究了员工参与对精益体验的影响。方法:本研究调查了不同的员工参与精益对制造业工人精益体验的影响。2008-2011年期间,从参与瑞典国家精益生产计划的瑞典制造公司收集了定性和定量数据。分析了129次调查(28家公司)、39次半结构化访谈和30份报告的数据。在主要分析中,比较了三组员工调查报告的精益经验:临时组员工(N = 36),他们主要通过间歇性项目参与精益;连续组员工(N = 69),通过长期改善小组参与;两种方式均参与的组合组员工(N = 24)。结果:连续组员工对精益的体验最积极,组合组次之。临时团队员工的积极体验最少,与他们的同行相比,他们不太可能报告精益改善了团队合作、职业安全、与变革相关的学习、决策和权威。结论:这些发现支持了持续的、结构化的参与机会的重要性,但也提出了更多的参与可能会导致更大的工作量和角色过载,从而降低员工参与的一些好处的可能性。因此,公司应该考虑让员工参与变革的努力,但应该注意参与活动的具体设计。
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Packages of participation: Swedish employees' experience of Lean depends on how they are involved.

Background: Lean Production is a dominant approach in Swedish and global manufacturing and service industries. Studies of Lean's employee effects are few and contradictory.

Purpose: Employee effects from Lean are likely not uniform. This paper investigates the effect of employees' participation on their experiences of Lean.

Method: This study investigated how different packages of employee participation in Lean affected manufacturing workers' experiences of Lean. During 2008-2011, qualitative and quantitative data were collected from Swedish manufacturing companies participating in the national Swedish Lean Production program Produktionslyftet. Data from 129 surveys (28 companies), 39 semi-structured interviews, and 30 reports were analyzed. In the main analysis, comparisons were made of the survey-reported Lean experiences of employees in three groups: temporary group employees (N = 36), who participated in Lean mostly through intermittent projects; continuous group employees (N = 69), who participated through standing improvement groups; and combined group employees (N = 24), who participated in both ways.

Results: Continuous group employees had the most positive experience of Lean, followed by the combined group. Temporary group employees had the least positive experiences, being less likely than their counterparts to report that Lean improved teamwork, occupational safety, and change-related learning, decision making, and authority.

Conclusions: These findings support the importance of continuous, structured opportunities for participation but raise the possibility that more participation may result in greater workload and role overload, mitigating some benefits of employee involvement. Consequently, companies should consider involving employees in change efforts but should attend to the specific design of participation activities.

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