What Ford and the UAW Really Learned from Japan: Listening, Respect, and a Better System
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When Ford and UAW leaders traveled to Japan in 1981, they expected to find better machines, tighter processes, and technical secrets. What they found instead was something far more powerful: a management system built on listening, trust, and respect for people.
In this Lean Blog Audio episode, Mark Graban revisits the 1981 Ford–UAW study trip to Toyota, Nissan, and Mazda through the reflections of Don Ephlin, one of the UAW’s most thoughtful leaders. The visitors didn’t discover better workers or superior discipline — they discovered a system that expected people to think, speak up, and improve the work.
From the meaning of the andon cord to the lessons that later shaped NUMMI, this episode explores why Lean was never really about tools — and why respect, listening, and psychological safety remain the foundation of sustainable improvement today.