Do You Like Spaghetti?
About unnecessary motion and other lean sins
“I did a lot of spaghetti walk this morning”, was uttered by my wife after we left our house. “What did you cover with your spaghettis?” was my question knowing that she was talking about her usual very complicated process of getting ready for a client visit.

About Adding Value
from the Lean perspective
- The customer requires this step to be done.
- The step causes an expected physical change.
- The step is done right the first time.

Spaghetti Walk in Your Organisation
Beware, it comes in the dress of daily activities

The Problem with Non-Value-Added Activities
and their consequences
These non-value-added steps lead to low process efficiency, i.e. only a small portion of the time spent on processes really adds value. Whilst some manufacturing organisations proud themselves with high productivity, in the service sector it is traditionally low.
The biggest room in the world is the room for improvement.
Reducing the Spaghetti Walk
and other non-value-added activities
Since this problem is in no way new, there have been studies to deal with it resulting in strategies that are applied in many industries. Especially in smaller organisations the problem lies in recognising the issue.
If you define the problem correctly, you almost have the solution.
When you “walk your processes“, be it physical or those on phone, email or IT system, do you recognise your plate of spaghettis the same way my wife did?