Every organization wants to work more efficiently. But if you really want to improve, you have to look inward first. Not just at what’s going well—but especially at what’s holding you back. Often, that starts with waste—subtle, but persistent.
In Lean, we speak of the 8 Wastes (Muda in Japanese). These are recurring patterns that don’t add value for the customer but do cost time, money, and energy. Sounds familiar? It probably is.
Every process has waste. The challenge is spotting it before it feels normal.
1. Overproduction – doing more than necessary
This might be the most deceptive form of waste. Reports, spreadsheets, emails… created “just in case” but not actually needed. It looks productive, but it clutters your processes and drains resources.
2. Waiting – where time quietly slips away
Delays in approvals, meeting decisions, or missing information slow everything down. And they leave employees frustrated and disengaged.
3. Transport – unnecessary movement
Whenever materials or information travel without clear added value, you lose time and oversight. Physical or digital, every extra handoff increases the chance of error.
4. Overprocessing – thorough can go too far
Extra steps that don’t add value? That’s overprocessing. Think triple checks, excessive approvals, or overly complex workflows. It’s a lot of effort with little return.
5. Inventory – more isn’t always better
Overflowing storage or “just-in-case” backlog? Stock—whether physical or digital—takes up space and often ends up outdated or unused.
6. Motion – losing time in the shuffle
Unnecessary walking, endless searching, switching between systems. Anything that distracts from focused work is motion waste. Better setups and clear agreements help reduce this.
7. Defects – mistakes are expensive
Any error that needs fixing costs twice: once to correct it and again in lost trust or productivity. Think wrong data entries, failed deliveries, or miscommunication.
8. Unused talent – potential left untapped
Ideas that go unheard, or employees stuck in roles that underuse their abilities. This is perhaps the most underestimated waste—and the biggest missed opportunity.
Put on your Lean glasses during a workplace walk-through
Spend an hour observing the shop floor—not to supervise, but to notice. Watch for moments where people wait, search, walk unnecessarily, or duplicate effort. Ask yourself at every step: does this truly add value for the customer?
You’ll be surprised how much waste you spot… once you know what to look for.
From awareness to action
Waste often hides in plain sight. It becomes part of “how we do things.” But once you start looking through a Lean lens, you’ll spot it everywhere—and that’s where improvement begins.
At Insightful, we help organizations recognize and eliminate waste. Not with lofty theory, but with concrete insights and practical tools. So your teams don’t just work smarter—they thrive.
Curious what’s possible when you turn waste into value?
Let’s start the conversation.