Page 17 - The Toyota Way Fieldbook
P. 17

Foreword






                                                        John Shook
                                                        Former Toyota Manager

        WHEN JEFF LIKER AND DAVID MEIER asked me to write a foreword for this
        fieldbook, I immediately and enthusiastically replied yes, but then had an
        immediate and nagging feeling of concern.  A “fieldbook” on the Toyota Way?
        What exactly is a fieldbook, and how would it describe the Toyota Way?  A
        cookbook with recipes? A roadmap?
            But what you the reader will find in these pages is no cookbook or roadmap,
        but more of a compass to set direction and help you steer your own course. Your
        guides Jeff and David are fellow travelers and well-equipped to help you, a fact
        I know well. Somewhat coincidentally, I was on the ground with both Jeff and
        David the first time they set foot on Gemba in Toyota City, though in quite dif-
        ferent circumstances for each. I met Jeff Liker when I was still with Toyota and
        Jeff was a professor at the University of Michigan continuing the research into
        socio-technical systems that he had begun years earlier as a student at the
        University of Massachusetts. I met David Meier in Toyota City when I was
        introducing many new American employees of Toyota to the Toyota Production
        System and he was there to began learning the Toyota Way the way you’re really
        supposed to learn it—on the plant floor.
            Jeff found Toyota through a formal education and subsequent research path
        that combined equal interest and experience in the “soft side” of industry with
        the “hard side.”  As an industrial engineering major and co-op student at
        Northeastern University, Jeff worked for General Foods Corporation, doing
        industrial engineering work such as operations research, plant layout, and so
        forth, but what came to interest him most was the Topeka dog food plant that
        was organized around self-directed work teams using a socio-technical systems
        (STS) approach—joint design of the social and technical systems. After getting
        a Ph.D. in sociology at University of Massachusetts, Jeff joined the faculty of the



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