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Lean Manufacturing – Getting Started, Benefits, and Common Mistakes

May 19, 2026 by
Lean Manufacturing – Getting Started, Benefits, and Common Mistakes
Oliwer Bujok

Lean Manufacturing is a management philosophy built around one principle: eliminate everything that does not add value for the customer. No unnecessary inventory, no unnecessary steps, no waiting. In practice, it means “slimming down” processes so a company can produce faster, cheaper, and smarter.

The idea originated in Japan, mainly from Toyota, and later spread worldwide. But Lean is not only for automotive factories. It is a way of thinking that can be implemented in almost any industry.


Why do companies choose Lean Manufacturing?

  • Lower costs – less inventory, fewer downtimes, fewer corrections.
  • Higher quality – problems are detected faster before they affect thousands of products.
  • Better operational flow – processes become simpler and easier to control.
  • Higher customer satisfaction – customers receive exactly what they need, faster than from competitors.
  • More engaged teams – Lean is based on the idea that everyone can suggest improvements.

➡️ See also: Production Automation with Odoo – Is It Worth It and What Does It Cost?


How does Lean work in practice?

Lean focuses on eliminating so-called muda, meaning waste. Traditionally, there are seven main types:


Overproduction

Producing more than the customer actually needs.

Waiting

Employees or machines stand idle while waiting for materials or information.

Transportation

Unnecessary movement of goods between warehouses or production areas.

Overprocessing

Doing more work than necessary, such as excessive formalities or duplicated actions.

Inventory

Excess raw materials, semi-finished goods, or products sitting in storage.

Motion

Unnecessary movement of employees during work.

Defects

Errors and defective products that require corrections or rework.

Many companies also add an eighth type of waste: unused employee potential. If employees notice problems but nobody listens to them, the business loses valuable improvement opportunities.


Real-life examples

Electronics factory

Instead of storing three months’ worth of components, the company operates using the Just in Time model with daily deliveries.

Furniture manufacturer

Internal transportation was reduced by arranging machines according to the production flow instead of constantly moving materials around the facility.

Printing company

Implemented a quality control system that detects errors after the first defective item instead of after 500 copies.


The most common Lean implementation mistakes


Confusing Lean with cost cutting

Lean is not about firing employees — it is about creating smarter processes.

Implementing too fast

Changing the entire factory at once usually creates chaos. It is better to start with one area or process.

Lack of management support

If leadership does not believe in Lean, employees will not believe in it either.

Ignoring employees

Lean depends on employee ideas and involvement. Without them, it becomes just another slogan.

No supporting systems

Lean combined with Excel spreadsheets alone will not work for long. Companies need ERP systems such as Odoo ERP.

➡️ See also: 10 Tasks Odoo Can Automate for Your Business


How to get started with Lean Manufacturing?

Map your processes

Identify where your company is truly losing time and money.

Involve employees

They usually know best where waste occurs.

Introduce small changes

Start with one department, one production line, or one process.

Measure results

Track time, costs, and quality. Without metrics, you cannot know whether Lean is working.

Use technology

Automation, WMS, reporting, and ERP systems are essential. Without them, Lean often remains only a theory.


FAQ

Does Lean work only in manufacturing?

No. Lean principles are also widely used in services, IT, logistics, and administration.

Does Lean mean reducing jobs?

No. Lean focuses on ensuring employees spend time on valuable work instead of repetitive, low-value tasks.

Where should I start Lean in my company?

The best starting point is process analysis and a pilot implementation in one selected area. From there, the company can scale improvements further.

Just in Time – what is it and how does it work in practice?