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Toyota Way

By Ben Lutkevich

What is the Toyota Way?

The Toyota Way is a comprehensive expression of the company's management philosophy, which is based on the two foundational pillars of Continuous Improvement, also known as kaizen, and Respect for People. Toyota documented its management philosophy in 2001 but has not made the document publicly available.

The Toyota Way is based on 14 principles and aims to remove obstacles to perfection in everyday business processes.

Background of the Toyota Way

Dr. Jeffrey Liker, a professor of industrial and operations engineering at the University of Michigan, analyzed the philosophy and principles in his 2004 book, The Toyota Way. Liker characterizes the approach as "a system designed to provide the tools for people to continually improve their work."

The Toyota Way is based on the Toyota Production System (TPS). Toyota developed the TPS in the 1950s as a response to automaker Ford's mass production systems. Eiji Toyoda, a member of the Toyota Group founding family, studied Ford's production system and realized Toyota couldn't achieve Ford's speed and scale of production. As a result, he worked with industrial engineer Taiichi Ohno to create the TPS, using machines right-sized for production demand and self-monitoring machines.

The TPS went on to inspire lean manufacturing decades later, which then informed the Toyota Way in 2001.

What are the Toyota Way principles?

The 14 principles of the Toyota Way, as detailed by Liker, are the following:

The Toyota Way's 14 principles can be framed using the 4P model:

What are the Toyota Way pillars?

The 14 principles of Toyota's management philosophy are categorized under two main pillars:

Uses of the Toyota Way

Elements of the Toyota Way have been widely adopted in business areas, including the following:

In lean project management, the Toyota Way is used to maximize efficiencies. It uses bottleneck analysis, which looks for places where process flow is constrained and tries to find the root causes. This helps companies conform with the principles in the process and problem-solving sections of the Toyota Way.

Industries where the Toyota Way might be useful include manufacturing, software production and healthcare. Any team tasked with performing a series of processes can use the approach to its benefit.

The Toyota Way vs. lean manufacturing

The Toyota Way and lean manufacturing are easily confused concepts. They focus on many of the same points and influence each other, but they aren't interchangeable.

Lean manufacturing is based on five principles laid out in the foundational book Lean Thinking: Banish Waste and Create Wealth in Your Corporation by James P. Womack and Daniel T. Jones. The principles are value, the value stream, flow, pull and perfection.

The Toyota Way is divided into 14 principles that take ideas from lean manufacturing and apply them specifically to Toyota's management principles and organizational culture. For example, principle 14 in the Toyota Way draws from principal five of lean -- pursuing perfection. Both the Toyota Way and lean are based on the TPS.

Agile takes the lean concepts that inspired the Toyota Way and applies them to software development. Learn about Agile, how it differs from other methodologies and how software methodologies have their roots in manufacturing methodologies.

01 Feb 2023

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