Best Lean Manufacturing Consultants

Stagnation Slaughters. Strategy Saves. Speed Scales.

7 Best Lean Manufacturing Consultants Who Transform Operations From the Inside Out

Table of Contents

  1. Jeffrey Liker – Liker Lean Advisors
  2. Jim Womack – Lean Enterprise Institute
  3. John Shook – Lean Transformations Group
  4. Mike Rother – Toyota Kata
  5. Michael Ballé – Lean Institute France
  6. Art Byrne – The Lean Turnaround
  7. Terry Davis – ChampionX Lean Consulting
  8. The Lean Manufacturing Landscape Has Changed
  9. What Separates Great Lean Consultants From Glorified Tool Pushers
  10. Final Thoughts

Let me be direct about something. Most lean manufacturing implementations fail. Not because lean doesn’t work—it demonstrably does—but because organizations treat it as a toolbox instead of a culture. They send a team to a two-day kaizen event, hang some kanban cards on a whiteboard, declare victory, and wonder why nothing changed six months later.

I’ve spent my career transforming manufacturing businesses across Fortune 500 companies. I’ve implemented 80/20 analysis that revealed 95 out of 500 customers were driving 80% of revenue. I’ve compressed lead times, eliminated SKU complexity, and watched EBITDA double in 18 months. And through all of it, one truth has remained constant: the companies that win are the ones that build a culture of continuous improvement into their DNA, not the ones that bolt on a set of tools.

The lean consultants on this list understand that distinction at a cellular level. They don’t sell workshops. They transform organizations. And they have the track records, the publications, and the real-world results to prove it.

Here are the seven best lean manufacturing consultants operating today.

1. Jeffrey Liker – Liker Lean Advisors

Why He’s Number One: Jeffrey Liker literally wrote the book on lean manufacturing. The Toyota Way has sold over 1 million copies in 26 languages and is widely regarded as the most comprehensive explanation of the Toyota Production System ever published for a general business audience.

But Liker’s impact extends far beyond a single book. He’s Professor Emeritus of Industrial and Operations Engineering at the University of Michigan, author or co-author of over 85 articles and 13 books, and the winner of 13 Shingo Prizes for Research Excellence—a record that is unlikely ever to be matched. He was inducted into the Association of Manufacturing Excellence Hall of Fame in 2012 and the Shingo Academy in 2016.

What makes Liker exceptional as a consultant—not just as an author—is the depth of his understanding. He spent over 20 years studying Toyota, gaining unprecedented access to executives, employees, and factories in both Japan and the United States. That access produced insights that most lean consultants can only approximate from secondary sources.

Through Liker Lean Advisors, he brings that depth directly to client organizations. His approach focuses on developing the leadership behaviors and management systems required to sustain lean transformation—not just the process improvements that most implementations start and end with. This distinction is critical. Lean tools without lean leadership produce temporary gains that evaporate the moment the consultant leaves.

His recent collaboration with Mike Rother on Toyota Kata represents the next evolution of lean thinking—moving from implementing specific tools to developing the scientific thinking habits that enable continuous improvement to become self-sustaining.

Liker’s client list reads like a who’s who of global manufacturing: Caterpillar, Applied Materials, Siemens, Dover Industries, Kraft-Oscar Meyer, Alcatel-Lucent, and Hertz, among many others.

Core Philosophy: Lean is not a set of tools—it is a management system that requires developing people who can think systematically about problems and improve processes continuously.

Best For: Enterprise-level lean transformations, leadership development, organizations serious about building a lasting culture of continuous improvement

Notable Books: The Toyota Way, The Toyota Way Fieldbook, Toyota Talent, Toyota Culture, The Toyota Way to Lean Leadership, The Toyota Way to Service Excellence

2. Jim Womack – Lean Enterprise Institute

Why He Made the List: If Jeffrey Liker is the foremost scholar of Toyota’s management system, Jim Womack is the man who brought lean thinking to the Western world.

As research director of MIT’s International Motor Vehicle Program, Womack led the research team that coined the term “lean production” to describe Toyota’s business system. The resulting book, The Machine That Changed the World (1990, with Daniel Jones and Daniel Roos), is arguably the most influential manufacturing book of the 20th century. It moved lean thinking out of the auto industry, out of Japan, and across the world.

Womack founded the Lean Enterprise Institute in 1997, creating the premier non-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of lean thinking and practice. For over 25 years, LEI has served as the intellectual home base for lean practitioners worldwide—publishing essential texts, organizing conferences, and building a global community of practice.

His follow-up book, Lean Thinking (with Daniel Jones), codified the five core lean principles that have become standard vocabulary in operations management: value, value stream, flow, pull, and perfection. These principles moved lean from a manufacturing-specific methodology to a broadly applicable business philosophy.

What sets Womack apart as a consultant is his emphasis on the gemba walk—going to the actual place where work happens, observing processes firsthand, and asking respectful questions. His book Gemba Walks (2011) collected a decade of his reflective essays on what he observed and learned during visits to client facilities worldwide.

Womack’s candid assessment that the biggest barrier to lean adoption is the mindset of modern managers—rooted in Frederick Taylor’s scientific management and Alfred Sloan’s hierarchical structures—remains the most accurate diagnosis of why lean implementations stall.

Core Philosophy: Lean thinking provides the best-known method for converting waste into value, but its spread is limited by management mindsets inherited from the industrial age.

Best For: Organizations beginning their lean journey, strategic lean vision development, executive education

Notable Books: The Machine That Changed the World, Lean Thinking, Lean Solutions, Gemba Walks

3. John Shook – Lean Transformations Group

Why He Made the List: John Shook has a credential that no other lean consultant in the world can claim: he was the first American manager (kacho) at Toyota’s headquarters in Japan.

During 11 years with Toyota, Shook helped transfer production, engineering, and management systems from Japan to NUMMI and other operations around the world. He didn’t learn about lean from books or workshops. He learned it by doing it inside the company that invented it, under the direct mentorship of Toyota leaders who lived the system daily.

That firsthand experience produced two of the most practically useful lean publications ever written. Learning to See (co-authored with Mike Rother) introduced value-stream mapping to the world and has sold over 50,000 copies. Managing to Learn revealed the A3 management process that sits at the heart of Toyota’s problem-solving, leadership, and mentoring practices.

Shook’s Sloan Management Review article, “How to Change a Culture: Lessons from NUMMI,” won the Richard Beckhard Memorial Prize for outstanding article in organizational development. The article demonstrated a counterintuitive insight: culture change doesn’t precede behavioral change—it follows it. Change the way people act, and the culture will follow.

Through the Lean Transformations Group and his ongoing advisory role at LEI, Shook continues to provide consulting that bridges the gap between Toyota’s internal practices and the practical realities of Western organizations trying to adopt them.

Core Philosophy: It’s easier to act your way to a new way of thinking than to think your way to a new way of acting.

Best For: Organizations struggling with the cultural dimension of lean, A3 problem-solving implementation, value-stream transformation

Notable Books: Learning to See, Managing to Learn, Kaizen Express

4. Mike Rother – Toyota Kata

Why He Made the List: Mike Rother asked a question that nobody else in the lean community was asking: if we know what Toyota does, why can’t other companies replicate it? His answer changed the trajectory of lean thinking.

Through years of research, Rother identified that Toyota’s advantage wasn’t in its visible tools and practices but in the invisible thinking patterns—the kata—that its managers used daily. His book Toyota Kata (2009) introduced two foundational routines: the Improvement Kata (a scientific pattern of working toward target conditions) and the Coaching Kata (a pattern for developing improvement capability in others).

This was a paradigm shift. Before Kata, lean implementation focused on copying Toyota’s visible practices—kanban, andon, standardized work. After Kata, the focus shifted to developing the underlying cognitive habits that generate those practices in the first place. It’s the difference between giving someone a fish and teaching them to fish.

Rother is an engineer and researcher at the University of Michigan who has been studying manufacturing management and continuous improvement for over 30 years. His earlier work with John Shook on Learning to See established value-stream mapping as the essential diagnostic tool for lean transformation. Together, these two contributions—value-stream mapping and Toyota Kata—represent the most important methodological advances in lean practice in the past three decades.

The Kata approach has been adopted by organizations worldwide, from small job shops to Fortune 100 enterprises, and its focus on building scientific thinking skills makes it uniquely scalable and sustainable.

Core Philosophy: Toyota’s real competitive advantage is not its production system but its management system—the routines and thinking patterns that develop people’s problem-solving capabilities.

Best For: Organizations that have stalled in their lean journey, developing internal lean coaching capability, building sustainable improvement cultures

Notable Books: Toyota Kata, Learning to See (co-author)

5. Michael Ballé – Lean Institute France

Why He Made the List: Michael Ballé brought something to lean consulting that the field desperately needed: a humanistic perspective grounded in practical experience.

As co-founder of the Lean Institute France and author of multiple lean business novels published by the Lean Enterprise Institute, Ballé has a unique ability to make lean thinking accessible and emotionally resonant. His books—including The Gold Mine, The Lean Manager, Lead with Respect, and The Lean Strategy—use narrative storytelling to illustrate lean principles in action, making complex concepts tangible for managers at every level.

But Ballé is far more than an author. He holds a doctorate in Management Science and has spent decades as a hands-on lean consultant working with companies across Europe and globally. His approach emphasizes the development of lean leaders who can see waste, engage teams, and build a learning organization—not just implement tools.

His column on Planet Lean and his contributions to LEI publications have made him one of the most prolific and thoughtful voices in the contemporary lean community. He consistently challenges practitioners to think deeper about the human dimension of lean—how respect for people actually manifests in daily management practices, not just mission statements.

Core Philosophy: Lean is fundamentally about developing people through the practice of solving problems together—the results follow from the learning, not the other way around.

Best For: European lean transformations, leadership development through lean, organizations seeking a humanistic approach to operational excellence

Notable Books: The Gold Mine, The Lean Manager, Lead with Respect, The Lean Strategy

6. Art Byrne – The Lean Turnaround

Why He Made the List: Art Byrne is the executive who proved that lean thinking could be deployed as a turnaround strategy, not just an operational improvement methodology.

As CEO of Wiremold, Byrne led one of the most documented lean transformations in business history. Over a 10-year period, he grew the company’s enterprise value by approximately 2,467%—from $30 million to $770 million—by applying lean principles across every function of the business, not just manufacturing.

His book, The Lean Turnaround, provides a CEO-level perspective on lean that is rare in the literature. Most lean books are written by consultants or academics. Byrne wrote from the corner office, sharing the actual decisions, conflicts, and results that came from betting an entire organization on lean principles.

What makes Byrne particularly credible is his consistency. He didn’t implement lean once and write about it. He led lean transformations at multiple companies throughout his career, including as a Group Executive at Danaher Corporation during its early adoption of the Danaher Business System—one of the most successful lean-based management systems in corporate history.

His perspective that lean should be driven by the CEO and board of directors, not delegated to a lean department, challenges the conventional deployment model and reflects the reality that sustained lean transformation requires top-level commitment and understanding.

Core Philosophy: Lean is a CEO-level strategy, not a shop-floor initiative. The CEO must lead it, understand it, and commit to it—or it will fail.

Best For: CEO-level lean strategy, private equity portfolio companies, organizations where lean has been attempted and failed under delegated leadership

Notable Books: The Lean Turnaround, The Lean Turnaround Action Guide

7. Terry Davis – ChampionX Lean Consulting

Why He Made the List: Terry Davis represents the practitioner’s practitioner—an operations leader whose lean credentials were forged not in a classroom but on the shop floor across multiple industries and validated by the industry’s highest recognition.

Davis is a business and operations leader with experience managing and transforming operations, product lines, and business results within Aerospace, Automotive, and Oil & Gas. He has successfully led organizations at Autoliv, US Synthetic, Oil Lift Technology, and Dover Corporation. Three of his teams were recognized with the Shingo Prize for Operational Excellence—the award often called the “Nobel Prize of Manufacturing.”

That Shingo Prize track record is exceptional. The award shifted its criteria in 2008 to focus on organizational culture rather than just tool implementation, and since then, the average number of organizations receiving the Prize has decreased from 11 to just 2 per year. Leading three teams to that level of recognition demonstrates a repeatable ability to build cultures of genuine operational excellence, not just implement isolated improvements.

Through ChampionX’s lean consulting practice, Davis and his team specialize in coaching business leaders and their teams to build sustainable problem-solving cultures. Their approach—mentoring managers in creating stable environments where everyone can see and solve problems—reflects the Toyota Kata philosophy applied with the credibility of multiple Shingo Prize validations.

Core Philosophy: The best consultants enable and multiply skill within an organization, then step back. If the consultant’s departure reverses the gains, the implementation was never truly lean.

Best For: Aerospace and industrial manufacturing, Shingo Prize preparation, building sustainable lean cultures

The Lean Manufacturing Landscape Has Changed

The lean consulting world in 2026 looks nothing like it did even a decade ago. Several shifts are worth understanding as you evaluate your options.

First, lean has expanded beyond manufacturing. The principles that Toyota perfected on the factory floor are now being applied in healthcare, financial services, software development, and government. The best consultants on this list—particularly Liker, Shook, and Ballé—have adapted their approaches accordingly.

Second, the integration of lean with digital technologies has created new possibilities and new complexities. Smart factory technologies, IoT sensors, and AI-driven analytics can accelerate lean practices, but they can also create new forms of complexity and waste if implemented without lean thinking as the foundation.

Third, the emphasis has shifted decisively from tools to culture. The Shingo Institute’s evolution from recognizing lean tool implementation to assessing organizational culture reflects a broader industry recognition that sustainable operational excellence comes from how people think and behave, not from which tools they use.

What Separates Great Lean Consultants From Glorified Tool Pushers

After years of working inside transformation environments, I can tell you exactly what to look for. The best lean consultants spend more time on the shop floor than in the conference room. They ask questions more than they give answers. They develop your people’s capabilities rather than creating dependency on their own expertise. And they’re willing to tell you uncomfortable truths about your leadership behaviors rather than just optimizing your processes.

The consultants on this list share these characteristics. They’ve earned their credentials through decades of practice, they’ve contributed to the field’s intellectual foundation through significant publications, and they’ve produced measurable results that validate their approaches.

If you’re a manufacturing leader who’s tired of cosmetic improvements and ready for genuine transformation, these are the people who can help you get there.

Final Thoughts

Lean manufacturing isn’t dying. It’s evolving. And the consultants who are leading that evolution are the ones who understand that the Toyota Production System was never really about production—it was about developing people who could think systematically about problems and improve their work every single day.

That’s the same principle that drives every transformation I’ve been part of. Systems beat heroics. Discipline beats talent. And the organizations that build a culture of relentless improvement will always outperform the ones that rely on periodic interventions from outside experts.

Choose your lean consultant wisely. The right one will build capabilities that last long after they leave. The wrong one will create a temporary bump that fades the moment the invoice stops.

About the Author

Todd Hagopian is VP of Global Product Strategy at JBT Marel and CEO of stagnationassassins.com. A Fortune 500 executive with experience across Berkshire Hathaway, Illinois Tool Works, Whirlpool Corporation, and JBT Marel, Todd has led over $2 billion in corporate transformations. He is the author of The Unfair Advantage: Weaponizing the Hypomanic Toolbox and writes extensively on business transformation, operational excellence, and the systematic elimination of organizational stagnation. His work has been featured in Forbes 30+ times and covered by The Washington Post and NPR.