Improve the process, not just the output
Keep refining how you do something, so quality compounds along with quantity.
Why it works
Kaizen’s industrial root is improving the process that produces results, because a better process improves every future output, not just the current one. Applied personally, regularly tweaking your method — your routine, your tools, your sequence — yields gains that compound across everything that method touches.
How to do it
- After a task, ask one small way the process could be smoother next time.
- Make that single adjustment rather than overhauling the whole system.
- Let process improvements accumulate the same way output gains do.
Evidence
Continuous process improvement is a well-documented practice in manufacturing and operations; its transfer to individual routines is a reasonable extension rather than something tested in controlled trials. (mechanistic)
Evidence is strongest in industrial settings; personal-process kaizen is an analogy that is plausible but not formally measured.
Sources
- Kaizen / continuous-improvement practice from Japanese manufacturing (industrial origin)
Common mistake
Only ever optimizing output ("do more reps") while never improving the process, so effort rises but efficiency stays flat.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach prompts a small process tweak after a routine, so you refine how you work and not just how much, compounding both over time.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).