What this software helps you do
This page is written for operations managers, CI managers, Lean Six Sigma practitioners, supervisors and team leaders working in logistics and distribution centres. It focuses on a single search intent: improvement actions — lean assistant: improvement actions, so every section below is shaped around that question rather than offering generic background.
By the end of this page you will know what Lean Assistant actually does, who it is built for, the use cases it covers and the most common mistakes to avoid when adopting improvement software. The intended next action is to view the assistant and try it on a real workflow.
Lean Assistant captures inputs, runs the analysis and produces a shareable output in one place, so the team stops re-deriving the same numbers in three different spreadsheets each week.
Who it is for
Lean Assistant is for the team that owns the work, not only the analyst who supports it. It is built around what people on the floor need in logistics and distribution centres, with a deliberately simple interface so adoption does not depend on a six-week training programme.
- Operations managers who need a single trusted view across shifts and sites
- Team leaders who run daily tier or shop floor reviews and want the data ready
- CI practitioners running structured improvement work across multiple lines
- Engineers and analysts who currently rebuild the same reports each week
- Sponsors who want a shared workspace to coach the team without owning the keyboard
Core use cases
Lean Assistant is most useful when the same workflow is being repeated by different people across different shifts and sites. The use cases below are the ones we see adopted first.
- Capturing improvement opportunities at source so they are not lost between shifts
- Running structured problem solving with a shared workspace per project
- Standing up daily tier and shop floor reviews with the data already prepared
- Tracking actions and owners across multiple workstreams in one place
- Producing review-ready outputs without rebuilding the same report each week
If your situation does not match the use cases above, start with one workflow and add others as the team gets comfortable. Trying to onboard everything at once is the most reliable way to slow adoption.
Practical workflow example
Running the Lean Assistant workflow end to end for improvement actions in logistics and distribution centres, from inputs through analysis to a shareable output the team can act on.
| Step | What happens in Lean Assistant |
|---|---|
| Step | One Lean Assistant workspace covering logistics and distribution centres |
| Step | used by a team of 9 over a fortnight |
| Step | with 10 workflow steps tracked and 8 reports generated. |
The example above shows what a healthy first month of using Lean Assistant looks like in logistics and distribution centres. The team owns the workflow; the software stays out of the way and removes the rework that used to happen between meetings.
View the assistantCommon mistakes when using improvement software
- Setting up Lean Assistant for one user instead of the team that needs the output
- Skipping the configuration step in Lean Assistant, then arguing about defaults later
- Not connecting Lean Assistant to the data the team already collects
- Treating Lean Assistant as a reporting tool rather than a working tool
- Letting Lean Assistant run unattended without anyone owning the output
Each of the points above appears repeatedly in real reviews. Catching them early is much cheaper than catching them after a change has been made on the floor.
Start with the assistant
View the Lean Assistant and try the workflow on a real piece of improvement work.
Download practical Lean and Six Sigma templates to structure the next stage of your improvement work.
Build the skills behind the work with practical training designed for operations people.
Use guided software to capture the data, structure the project and report progress with the team.
Frequently asked questions
How should Lean Assistant be set up for improvement actions in logistics and distribution centres?
Start with the team that will use the output, not the IT team that will install it. In logistics and distribution centres, configure Lean Assistant around the workflow you already run, then layer the improvement actions use case on top so adoption is fast.
What does Lean Assistant actually do?
Lean Assistant captures the inputs, runs the analysis and produces a shareable output in one place, so the team stops re-deriving the same numbers in three different spreadsheets each week.
Who should own Lean Assistant day to day?
The person who owns the work the software supports, not the person who installed it. Lean Assistant is a working tool, so its owner has to be on the floor with the team that uses it.