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In this episode, Matt is joined by Stacey Franklin, a widely recognised Lean thinking leader and one of Ireland’s most respected voices in continuous improvement.
Stacey is the founder and CEO of Kanso, a consultancy inspired by the Japanese concept of simplicity, helping organisations cut through complexity and create clarity in how they work. With experience spanning telecommunications, healthcare, service industries, and higher education, Stacey brings a grounded, practical, and refreshingly honest perspective on what Lean really looks like in the real world.
Together, Matt and Stacey explore the reality behind Lean belts, what they truly represent, and why the way we teach and learn continuous improvement needs to evolve. They unpack the gap between certification and capability, the pressure placed on CI professionals to justify their existence, and why behaviours and culture matter far more than rigid frameworks and toolkits.
The conversation also dives into modern Lean, micro learning, accessibility, and how technology and AI should support learning rather than replace thinking. Stacey shares insight from her work designing accredited programmes and lecturing at Master Black Belt level, alongside candid reflections on leadership, decision making, and the loneliness that can come with CI roles.
This episode is for anyone who wants Lean to mean something more than a certificate on the wall, and who cares about building improvement capability that actually lasts.
Key Takeaways
Lean belts show a pathway, not proficiency
Certification without standards creates confusion
Continuous improvement is about people, not project plans
Culture beats firefighting every time
Learning must reflect how people actually learn today
Tools support understanding, they are not the goal
Decision-making is one of the biggest blockers to improvement
AI is a support, not a substitute for thinking
Respect for people is not optional
Stacey’s Resources
Website
LinkedIn
Find out more about Ever-So-Lean, including our learning programmes at
Explore the Lean Competency System
Learn more about the British Quality Foundation
If you’re enjoying the Ever-So-Lean Podcast, please take a moment to rate and review it. It genuinely helps more people find the show and keeps these conversations going.
Where people thrive, performance follows.
By Matt SimsIn this episode, Matt is joined by Stacey Franklin, a widely recognised Lean thinking leader and one of Ireland’s most respected voices in continuous improvement.
Stacey is the founder and CEO of Kanso, a consultancy inspired by the Japanese concept of simplicity, helping organisations cut through complexity and create clarity in how they work. With experience spanning telecommunications, healthcare, service industries, and higher education, Stacey brings a grounded, practical, and refreshingly honest perspective on what Lean really looks like in the real world.
Together, Matt and Stacey explore the reality behind Lean belts, what they truly represent, and why the way we teach and learn continuous improvement needs to evolve. They unpack the gap between certification and capability, the pressure placed on CI professionals to justify their existence, and why behaviours and culture matter far more than rigid frameworks and toolkits.
The conversation also dives into modern Lean, micro learning, accessibility, and how technology and AI should support learning rather than replace thinking. Stacey shares insight from her work designing accredited programmes and lecturing at Master Black Belt level, alongside candid reflections on leadership, decision making, and the loneliness that can come with CI roles.
This episode is for anyone who wants Lean to mean something more than a certificate on the wall, and who cares about building improvement capability that actually lasts.
Key Takeaways
Lean belts show a pathway, not proficiency
Certification without standards creates confusion
Continuous improvement is about people, not project plans
Culture beats firefighting every time
Learning must reflect how people actually learn today
Tools support understanding, they are not the goal
Decision-making is one of the biggest blockers to improvement
AI is a support, not a substitute for thinking
Respect for people is not optional
Stacey’s Resources
Website
LinkedIn
Find out more about Ever-So-Lean, including our learning programmes at
Explore the Lean Competency System
Learn more about the British Quality Foundation
If you’re enjoying the Ever-So-Lean Podcast, please take a moment to rate and review it. It genuinely helps more people find the show and keeps these conversations going.
Where people thrive, performance follows.