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Lean and Green: Profit for Your Workplace and the Environment | 
| Author: Pamela J Gordon Publisher: Berrett-Koehler Publishers Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $8.70 You Save: $16.25 (65%)
New (24) Used (17) Collectible (1) from $1.11
Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 566625
Media: Paperback Pages: 250 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.9 x 0.7
ISBN: 1576751708 Dewey Decimal Number: 658.408 EAN: 9781576751701 ASIN: 1576751708
Publication Date: September 9, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Ships from PA, 15-day return for any reason. Fast Shipping, thank you for your order
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Product Description When it comes to believing that business can be profitable and environmentally sensitive, cynics abound on both sides. But in Lean and Green, Pamela Gordon proves that capitalism and environmentalism are not mutually exclusive quite the contrary. She shows how "green" business practices enable organizations to save millions, even billions of dollars each year. Lean and Green chronicles over one hundred examples of how people in twenty different organizations around the world from clerks, farmers, and city employees to chemists and executives have strengthened environmental practices and the balance sheet. She details waste-saving, profit-building acts as basic as Linda Gee at LSI Logic digging out usable pre-worn shoe covers to wear in the clean room, and as broad as the city of Santa Monica paving residential streets with white top to reduce urban heat and increase surface longevity. Drawing on her background as a leading business consultant, Gordon shows readers precisely how to sell their environmental ideas to management. She describes how to make the case in no-nonsense business terms, set concrete goals that the new practices will achieve, measure the economic results of the new practices, and make sure the right people hear about the results so that environmental initiatives continue. Each chapter includes a "Making It Easy" list of action steps for implementing lean and green improvements in the workplace easily and immediately. Lean and Green will inspire employees and employers alike to explore creative ways to simultaneously save the planet and bolster the bottom line.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 6 more reviews...
Save the environment...and money December 29, 2001 Roger E. Herman (Greensboro, NC USA) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
From time to time, business leaders have invested time, energy, attention, and financial resources in the respected work of environmental protection. The work from the corporate sector has not been consistent, appreciated, or encouraged. Through this book, the author hopes to stimulate more organizations to be actively supportive of the environment-and good business practices. A Certified Management Consultant with significant personal engagement with corporate environmental issues, Pamela Gordon profiles the work of twenty employers to show what can be done.Many authors gather profiling information for books like this by researching on the internet, magazine articles, other books, and industry reports. To her credit, Gordon personally visited 16 of the companies cited, with the other four being visited by people from her firm. This direct involvement adds a higher degree of authenticity to her work and this book. Lean and Green is organized into three sections. Part One presents four steps for creating a lean and green organization: Question Wasteful Practices, Gain Lean and Green Endorsement Using Business Language, Collaborate to Achieve Lean and Green Goals, and Track Progress for Environment and Profit. Interwoven through these introductory chapters are stories about how the 20 profiled employers have applied these approaches. The organizations are mostly large, well-known companies, and a city government, but the principles can be applied in smaller organizations, as well. The second section of the book presents Real-Life Examples of Putting Lean and Green into Practice. Ten chapters lay out the how-to of building a higher consciousness and effectiveness of environmental practices. Again, Gordon uses examples and experiences of her profiled companies and their people to illustrate and emphasize her points. The third part of the book, How to Make the Most Difference, is best reported to you by listing the powerful chapter headings: How to Become an Environmental Leader in Your Organization, Work with Your Organizational Culture to Support Change, Be an Environmental Activist Using Tactics That Benefit Business, and The Fastest Route to Lean and Green. Quotes are used to open each chapter, as many authors do. To focus even more strongly on the dedication and focus of her profiled corporate activists, Gordon quotes people from the companies rather than outside sources. Each chapter ends with a valuable summary of the chapter, entitled "Making it Easy." This book will smooth the way for its intended audiences: employees, managers, top leaders, and observers of organization that have great potential to make a difference. As I read the book, I found myself already becoming more aware of opportunities in my own surroundings to make a difference. If you're interested in protecting the environment and your company's bottom line, this book will open your eyes and give you tools for success.
Should Be Mandatory Reading For All Manufacturing Executives September 17, 2001 Scott Robert (San Francisco, CA USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This well-researched and thoughtful work is a very readable and practical guide proving that integrating environmentally-friendly processes and procedures in manufacturing operations is not only necessary for code compliance and corporate public relations, but can also improve companies' financial performance. Ms. Gordon provides real world examples showing how some of the world's largest and best-known companies have taken profitable steps toward improving our environment while at the same time improving their bottom line.
Lean and Green:Profit for Your Workplace and the Environment September 26, 2001 Ernest S. Gordon (Saratoga, CA United States) This is a book on being productive in the workplace and also being kind to this earth of ours. In this "how to do it" book the author instructs by real life examples from industry, the way that drives home the message like no other way. I wouldn't be surprised if the book is used as a college textbook in the future in the catagory of environmental studies. Her book has come out at a time of the recent national tragedy that we are suffering as an effort to protect our way of life and the earth as opposed to those who would destroy them both.
Turning received wisdom on its head November 19, 2001 Lisa R. Hirsch (Oakland, CA USA) Gordon's book turns upside down claims that environmentally sound practices are either expensive or bad for business; to the contrary, reducing waste and using cleaner processes increases business profitability. She shows how businesses of all sizes can incorporate good environmental practices, and she backs up her points with dozens of real-world examples. With "Lean and Green" to point the way, every business can design its own plans forreducing environmental impact. Her style is informal, clear, and encouraging. This book is a must-read for anyone with an interest in either business or the environment.
Excellent. Practical. Hopeful. November 16, 2004 Harvey Stone
"Lean and Green" is a must-read for anyone involved in business and/or sustainability. Personally, I've been involved in both. I've hosted my own radio show that included "lean and green" types of subjects. And I'm impressed by what Pam Gordon has done. Rather than being theoretical or abstract, she's drawn upon her corporate experience and expertise. She's provided a ton of real-world, lean-and-green business examples from IBM, Celestica, NEC, Apple, Horizon and many other companies. She's also provided a framework for people in business who want to introduce lean-and-green activities within their own companies. And, perhaps most importantly of all, she has chronicled some key indicators of a little-recognized trend these days: the shift towards a world of manufacturing that uses far less materials and energy and produces far less waste. "Lean and Green" is easy-to-read and hopeful. I don't recommend books very much. I recommend this one.
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