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. 2017 Jan 18;9:1–14. doi: 10.2147/JHL.S120166

Table 3.

Comparison of Lean leadership and servant leadership

Leadership aspect Lean Servant
Origins Based on Toyota Production System
First described in 1980 by Womack and Jones First described in 1970 by Greenleaf
Roots in post-World War I training program Roots in theological and philosophical belief systems
Built upon long history of production systems
(Henry Ford and Walter Edwards Deming)
Philosophy Remove waste to maximize value Serve others’ needs
Commitment to respect Develop a sustainable organization
Focus on organization’s well being Focus on leaders meeting the needs of others
Qualification of employees People-driven, person-oriented attitude
Focus on process Focus on people
Characteristics Employee empowerment Communication
Listening
Integrity
Humility
Self-development Empathy
Development of others Appreciation of others
Modesty Healing
Listening
Openness
Trust Awareness
Visibility
Responsibility Persuasion
Influence
Motivating Conceptualization
Modeling Modeling
Respect for people Foresight
Personal observation of work Stewardship
Observe Trust
Engage Service
Improve
Create a vision Commitment to growth of people
Encouragement
Empowerment
Establish goals Teaching
Delegation
Remove barriers Vision
Building community
Pioneering
Honesty
Credibility
Competence
Values Continuous improvement Humility
Safety
Quality
Effectiveness
Efficiency
Respect for people Respect for others
Employee satisfaction
Human development Serve the community
Employee empowerment
Standardization Quality of service
Release of checklists
Tools Kaizen events (rapid improvement events) Personal values
Value stream map Moral core
A3 framework Characteristics
PDCA cycle Humility
Authenticity
Stewardship
Vision
Desire to serve others
Just in time
Kanban (inventory-control system to control the supply chain)
Intelligent automation
5-whys
5S
Strategy deployment
Evaluation: shop-floor walking
Ohno cycle
Organizational culture Improvement culture Open and trusting environment
No blame approaches to mistakes and errors Collaboration
Problem is opportunity
Doing the right thing Transparency
Doing more with less
Transparency Learning environment
Room to learn and to make mistakes
Employee empowerment
Teamwork Safe psychological environment
Learning culture
Organizational performance Higher competitive advantage Sustainable organization
Long term sustainability of the organization Team effectiveness
Increased teamwork
More collaboration
Tangible outputs: Tangible outputs:
Reduced error rates High quality of care
Reduction in costs
Reduced waiting times Enhance procedural justice
Increased productivity
Increased quality
Reduced costs
Reduced mortality rates
Improved patient care
Intangible outputs: Intangible outputs:
Increased employee motivation Trust in the organization
Increased patient safety
Increased employee satisfaction Increased patient satisfaction
Improved patient safety Increased employee empowerment
Improved patient satisfaction Increased organizational commitment of employees
Employee empowerment
Achieve perfection in processes Employees become healthier, wiser, freer, and more
autonomous

Abbreviation: PDCA, plan do check act.