Learn how leaders reduce defects and safety risks by fixing systems—not blaming people.
Presented by Mark Graban
Human error is inevitable. Defects don’t have to be.
This on-demand session shows how mistake-proofing (Poka-Yoke) and Jidoka help organizations prevent repeat errors by redesigning processes—using real examples from Toyota, healthcare, software, and everyday products.
View all previous KaiNexus Continuous Improvement Webinars
Many organizations respond to mistakes with retraining, warnings, or reminders to “be more careful.” Those responses assume perfect human behavior—and they rarely prevent the next error.
Mistake-proofing takes a different approach. It acknowledges human limitations and focuses on system design: making the right action easier and the wrong action harder—or impossible.
In this webinar, Mark Graban and Linda Vaccaro explain mistake-proofing and Jidoka as practical leadership disciplines. Not slogans. Not “idiot-proofing.” And not blame disguised as process improvement.
The result is safer, more reliable work—without relying on vigilance or heroics.
Why warning signs, policies, and retraining are the weakest forms of error prevention
How Poka-Yoke and Jidoka reduce defects by changing systems, not people
The leadership shift from “who made the mistake?” to “why did the system allow it?”
Real-world examples of mistake-proofing in manufacturing, healthcare, software, and daily life
How to identify high-risk processes where prevention matters most
How tools like FMEA support proactive risk reduction—not just post-incident analysis
This session is especially valuable for:
Executives accountable for safety, quality, and operational performance
Continuous improvement and Lean leaders running daily Kaizen systems
Healthcare leaders focused on patient safety and error prevention
Operations, engineering, and quality leaders responsible for reliable processes
Organizations experiencing repeat errors despite training and policies
Errors are human. Systems are a leadership choice.
Mistake-proofing is not about controlling people or eliminating judgment. It’s about designing work that supports people—by reducing reliance on memory, vigilance, and perfect execution.
When leaders stop adding reminders and start redesigning processes, improvement becomes durable.
Organizations don’t struggle with quality and safety because people don’t care.
They struggle because systems still depend on flawless human behavior.
Mistake-proofing isn’t a technical afterthought.
It’s a leadership responsibility—and a foundation of Lean, Kaizen, and continuous improvement.
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Mark Graban, a senior advisor to KaiNexus, is an internationally-recognized author, speaker, and consultant. His latest book, The Mistakes That Make Us: Cultivating a Culture of Learning and Innovation, is available now.
Mark is also the author of the award-winning book Lean Hospitals: Improving Quality, Patient Safety, and Employee Engagement and others, including Measures of Success: React Less, Lead Better, Improve More.
He serves as a consultant through his company, Constancy, Inc. Additionally, Mark hosts podcasts, including “Lean Blog Interviews” and “My Favorite Mistake.”
Education: B.S. in Industrial Engineering from Northwestern University; M.S. in Mechanical Engineering, and M.B.A. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s “Leaders for Global Operations” Program.
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