
When I first started studying Lean Six Sigma, I thought it was going to be all business—charts, graphs, acronyms, and workflow processes. And to be fair… it is those things.
But somewhere around Chapter 12, I realized something unexpected:
Lean thinking isn’t just for production lines or project management—it’s also a mindset that can shape your life.
In fact, it’s already started shaping mine.
🗂️ Sorting Out What Really Matters
One of the first concepts Lean teaches is about eliminating waste—whether that’s excess inventory, extra motion, or unnecessary steps in a process.
For me? That meant taking a long look at the clutter in my life—both physical and mental.
- Did I need that pile of unused supplies “just in case”?
- Was I spending time on tasks that didn’t really add value to my goals?
- Was I letting messy workflows get in the way of meaningful progress?
Applying Lean to my personal life meant re-evaluating where my energy was going—and gently asking myself if it was worth it.
đź“… Better Workflow, Not Just More Work
I’ve started organizing my week with Lean in mind: study time, blogging, cleaning, career planning—it all gets a clearer place in my schedule now.
Instead of jumping between tasks or letting anxiety set the pace, I try to:
- Create flow: One thing at a time, with intention
- Minimize defects: Like overcommitting or ignoring my own limits
- Respect the system: My brain is part of the system, and it needs breaks, not just productivity hacks
đź§˝ House Cleaning with a Lean Lens
Even cleaning has changed. I’ve started grouping tasks by location (rather than type), so I can do one efficient sweep per room. I’ve stopped re-handling things I could have dealt with once. I even made a checklist based on frequency and value—yes, I’m that person now.
But here’s the thing: it helps.
It reduces the feeling of overwhelm. It saves time. And most of all, it gives me a sense of structure in a world that often feels very unstructured.
🎯 Clarity in Career and Life
Lean isn’t just about tidying or tweaking a spreadsheet—it’s about being clear on what adds value. In work, in home life, and in personal development.
It’s helped me reframe my own goals—not as vague aspirations, but as processes I can build, improve, and refine.
I don’t need to do everything all at once—I just need to keep improving what I already have.
That’s the heart of continuous improvement: progress over perfection. Learning by doing. And trusting that even a small change, done with purpose, makes a difference.
Final Thought
When I started this certification, I didn’t expect it to reach into my daily routines and reshape how I approach life goals. But here we are—me, a Lean-thinking, checklist-making, clarity-seeking work in progress.
And honestly? I like the direction I’m headed.
—
Mell