Now through March 28: Nominations for the 2025 cohort are being accepted in CMU=You via the Development Programs section. Interested employees should discuss with their supervisor to obtain approval and leadership support.
Any questions, please contact the Learning and Development team.
Lean Six Sigma
Aligned with Carnegie Mellon’s strategic focus of improving processes and efficiencies, the Lean Six Sigma program is a hands-on way to learn how Lean Six Sigma principles can help you achieve continual process improvement.
On this page:
- About the Program
- Program Goals
- Program Outcomes
- Nomination Requirements
- Timeline
- Project Criteria
- Finding a Project
- Past Projects and Cohorts
About the Program
The Lean Six Sigma program at CMU provides two types of participation opportunity:
- Individual participants can take advantage of the opportunity for professional development and growth.
- Campus partners can propose a team project. Through these projects, program participants gather hands-on experience, and project sponsors get the opportunity to have cross-functional teams explore potential improvement or cost savings for their process or service.
Program Goals
- Implement a continual process improvement program using the principles of Lean Six Sigma
- Align the program with Carnegie Mellon’s strategic focus of improving processes and efficiencies
- Provide a practical experience for participants to apply the principles learned in the classroom to a team-based project under the guidance of a subject matter expert/consultant
- Provide participants with support to pursue the Lean Six Sigma Green Belt certification at the end of the program
Program Outcomes
- Contribute to establishing a culture of process improvement
- Provide university employees from various departments and divisions with the skills and tools essential to solving problems at various levels
- Reduce costs, raise productivity and enhance overall customer satisfaction
- Standardize the tools and techniques used to improve processes
Nomination Requirements
The nomination period is open through mid-April of each year, with 30 spots available to motivated staff who meet the following requirements:
- Some understanding of statistics
- Inclination toward analytics (nice but not necessary)
- Interest in Lean Six Sigma and process improvement
- Initiative; not easily swayed from doing the work
- Displays "stick-to-it-ive-ness"
- Support from manager to dedicate time for training and working the project
- Works well with others; ability to influence
- Can draw insights from everyone on the project team
- Mix of individual contributors, managers, technical and non-technical
- Can synthesize customer expectations into measurable outcomes
- Wants to grow and learn with a team of colleagues beyond department
Timeline
- February/March: Socialize the program with leadership and stakeholder groups and solicit nominations
- April: Confirm program participants and identify potential projects/sponsors; share participant and project lists with university leadership
- May: Begin pre-program communications; finalize projects/sponsors and match participants to projects; distribute training materials as applicable
- June–July: Participants attend in-person and virtual training sessions. The 2025 training schedule is:
- June 10 - 13, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (In Person)
- July 14 - 15, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Virtual)
- July 28 - 29, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Virtual)
- August–November: Project teams meet for work and research; monthly team touchpoints with consultant and HR learning and development team; individual touchpoints as needed
- November–December: Teams present their project findings (in person, hybrid or virtual, depending on circumstances)
Project Criteria
Characteristics of "Good" Projects |
Characteristics of "Bad" Projects |
Type of Problem:
Organizational Support:
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Lack of project team support:
Data Issues:
Project Issues:
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Finding a Project
- Start with high level organizational goal.
- Determine how to measure progress toward that goal.
- Baseline that metric:
- Look at metric performance over time.
- Focus on a goal that is falling short of the desired result.
- Brainstorm key drivers of that metric.
- Determine how to measure the key drivers.
- Baseline the key drivers.
- Repeat this process until you find an appropriately scoped problem to solve.