4.2 Article

A leadership maturity model for implementing Six Sigma in academic institutions - using case studies to build theory

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LEAN SIX SIGMA
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages 675-692

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/IJLSS-01-2020-0011

Keywords

Six sigma; Lean; Maturity model; Leadership

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This paper presents a maturity model for academic leadership teams to assess their ability to deliver continuous improvement culture through Lean Six Sigma, highlighting the best practices and improvement directions of UK academic institutions in continuous improvement.
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to present a maturity model for academic leadership teams to benchmark their ability to deliver a culture of continuous improvement through the use of Lean Six Sigma. Teams will also be able to use this model to develop strategic action plans to improve the culture of continuous improvement within their institution. In addition, this paper explains the journey the authors have taken in creating this model by using a mixture of literature review, questionnaires and case studies to build the model and the use of test cases to refine and improve the model. Design/methodology/approach This paper uses a structured approach, focussing first on assessing the state of UK Lean Six Sigma(LSS) implementation and the, through the use of the case study method, the authors have designed a maturity model based on the classic capability maturity matrix approach. The final model has then been tested to refine the model into an improved version. Findings Key findings from interviewing the academic institutions that make up this paper highlight the current best practice in the UK and how far they still have to travel to become truly continuous improving organisations. Research limitations/implications This paper is limited to only focussing on UK institutions in the design and development of the maturity model. Future research should benchmark UK institutions more formally with international universities from North America and the Far East. Practical implications This paper present a final maturity model which can be used by academic leadership teams to both map their maturity at delivering continuous improvement projects and to act as an action plan to move the culture towards a quality-based, continuously improving institution. Originality/value To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first such model to be produced focussing on the leadership and sustainability of deploying LSS in academic institutions.

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