Essayer OR - Gratuit
Get Work Back on Track With Visual Management
MIT Sloan Management Review
|Fall 2025
The key to fixing snarled knowledge-work processes is to make invisible work visible.

DESPITE CORPORATE INVEST-ments in digital initiatives, automation, AI tools, and reorgs, many managers struggle with the daily reality that the core work of their organization is both slow and error-prone.
While head-spinning changes in the operating context are keeping many senior executives focused on strategies to fend off disruption, their employees and team leaders are growing frustrated with predictable mistakes, difficulties improving execution, and endless, productivity-sapping logjams.
Turning this common scenario around requires understanding and reconfiguring how work gets done. Three decades of collaboration on organizational research and our experiences working in and for companies led us to an approach we call dynamic work design. That model initially comprised four simple principles: structure the work to spot problems, use a scientific approach to solving problems, connect both front-line employees and managers more explicitly to each other and to the work, and regulate the flow of work into the system.¹
Those four principles, which we expand on in our new book, There’s Got to Be a Better Way (Basic Venture, 2025), are often easy to see in physical work such as that done in an assembly line: A stopped line represents a problem to be solved; simple structured methods, like Six Sigma’s DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, and Control) or Toyota’s A3, support employees in tackling the gap in a systematic fashion; supervisors and line managers can be easily summoned when a problem can’t be solved locally; and line speed determines the balance between both the number of stoppages and the time available to fix them.
But what do we do in the far larger world of knowledge work when we can’t see that the work has stopped or something else has gone wrong? The answer, which we explore in this article, was crystallized for us a few years ago on a napkin from a hotel bar in Nagoya, Japan.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition Fall 2025 de MIT Sloan Management Review.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review
Formalize Escalation Procedures to Improve Decision-Making
Conflict is inevitable. A systematic approach to escalation helps organizations manage disagreements efficiently and make better decisions.
11 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
A New Method for Assessing Circular Business Cases
Conventional business analysis overlooks the costs and new revenue sources found in circular approaches.
11 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
Building Innovation Teams Across National Borders
Restrictive immigration policies are forcing multinational enterprises to rethink their R&D strategies. Here are four approaches to maintain innovation excellence with geographically dispersed teams.
14 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
Strategic Alignment Reconciles Purpose and Profitability
Sustained performance requires a company purpose that is validated in the market.
10 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
The Hidden Costs of Coding With Generative Al
Generative Al can boost coding productivity, but careless deployment creates technical debt that cripples scalability and destabilizes systems.
6 mins
Fall 2025
MIT Sloan Management Review
Aligning Strategy and Skills
\"DO WE HAVE THE PEOPLE WE need to successfully execute our strategic plan?” That’s a perennial middle-of-the-night worry for business leaders.
1 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
Should You Recruit New People, or Upskill Your Workforce?
I worry that we don't have the skills in-house that we need to seize future opportunities.
2 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
The High Cost of Executives' Intellectual Property Blind Spots
Strategic business decisions often involve intellectual property, but senior managers' understanding of salient issues is often limited.
10 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
How the EU's Taxonomy Combats Greenwashing
The European Union's criteria for identifying green activities can be a better guide than standard ESG measures.
7 mins
Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review
A Data-Driven Approach to Advancing Meritocracy
Instead of simply relying on best practices, employers should adopt a talent management strategy that addresses bias and inequity while ensuring efficient, fair, and merit-based decisions.
16 mins
Fall 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size