NO TIME TO WASTE · ISSUE 27
The 15-Minute Meeting That Develops Your Team
What if your daily team meeting wasn’t about reporting problems — but about sharing solutions?
Most daily huddles follow the same pattern. The manager runs the meeting. The team reports what went wrong. Everyone leaves and gets back to work. It ticks a box, but it doesn’t build anyone up.
THE BIG IDEA
A Daily Learning Session, Not a Status Update
Some of the best Lean leaders describe their daily management cadence as a short, structured check-in not as a management tool — but as a staff development session.
The difference starts with who runs it. Instead of the manager hosting every day, the role rotates. Initially to those who are willing. Over time, to everyone on the team.
Each host brings something personal — an improvement they’ve made, a better way of doing a task, or a piece of standard work they’ve updated. The focus is always on the positive. It is not a session to solve problems. It is a session to talk about the solutions — and to share what better looks like.
“Don’t look with your eyes, look with your feet… people who only look at the numbers are the worst of all.”
— Taiichi Ohno
Father of the Toyota Production System (c. 1970s)
When people take turns hosting, something shifts. They prepare. They think about their own work differently. They notice small improvements they might never have mentioned. And over time, the team builds a shared understanding of what good looks like — because they are learning from each other, not just being told.
IN PRACTICE
A food production company we worked with had a daily stand-up that had become stale. Same manager, same format, same list of yesterday’s issues. Attendance was slipping.
They made one change: the hosting rotated. Each morning, a different team member ran the 12-minute session. The only brief — share one thing you’ve improved or learned this week.
Within a month, the tone had changed. People started arriving early. One operator shared a simple labelling change that cut mix-ups by half. Another demonstrated a cleaning sequence she’d shortened by three minutes. None of these were big projects — they were small, practical wins that had gone unnoticed until someone had a reason to share them.
The manager’s role shifted from running the meeting to coaching people who were nervous about hosting — which turned out to be its own form of development.
REINFORCE IT
The Daily 3S
The best daily cadences don’t end when the huddle finishes. They are often followed by a Daily 3S — a short, focused routine that reinforces total ownership and standard work right where the work happens.
Sweep — to inspect. Walk your area and look for any abnormality. Not just cleanliness, but anything that doesn’t look right.
Sort — to simplify. Ensure you only have what’s relevant in your environment. Remove distractions, clutter, and anything that shouldn’t be there.
Standardise — to act. Address the abnormalities you’ve found. Update the standard so the improvement sticks.
It takes minutes. But it connects the conversation in the huddle to the reality on the job. If someone shared an improvement in the morning meeting, the 3S is where the team sees it in practice — and where the new standard becomes the norm.
TRY THIS WEEK
Three steps to get your daily management cadence started
“You’ve got to think about big things while you’re doing small things, so that all the small things go in the right direction.”
— Mike Rother
Toyota Kata (2009)
The daily management cadence is where culture is built — not in strategy documents or annual plans, but in 15 minutes every morning where people share what they’ve made better. The businesses that improve fastest are not the ones with the best initiatives. They are the ones whose people have the best daily habits.
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