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Enterprise-wide lean management systems: a test of the abnormal profitability hypothesis

Arnaldo Camuffo (Department of Management and Technology, Bocconi University, Milano, Italy) (ION Management Science Lab, SDA Bocconi School of Management, Milano, Italy)
Alberto Poletto (Department of Management and Technology, Bocconi University, Milano, Italy)

International Journal of Operations & Production Management

ISSN: 0144-3577

Article publication date: 20 July 2023

Issue publication date: 5 February 2024

366

Abstract

Purpose

The paper tests if and to what extent lean management system adoption generates abnormal profitability, and how it accrues over time. Configurational approaches to lean management systems and “S-curve” effects in lean implementation are used to ground the paper's hypotheses and interpret its findings.

Design/methodology/approach

Using the emerging view of lean as enterprise-wide management systems, this quasi-experimental study uses a difference-in-differences approach to estimate the abnormal profitability (ROIC) attributable to lean management system adoption. The paper leverages a unique data set of lean adopters nested in a panel data set (19 years) of 2,088 industrial firms matched by industry and firm size. It applies a variety of regression methods (two-way fixed effect panel estimator, propensity score matching, instrumental variable two-stage-least squares) to estimate the size of the abnormal profitability attributable to lean management systems, addressing endogeneity issues related to non-random sampling, omitted variable bias and reverse causation. It also analyzes the cross-firm variability of such abnormal profitability and how it accrues over time.

Findings

For the average non-adopter in the sample (44.3 million euro revenues), lean adoption generates abnormal ROIC ranging from 1.4% to 3.9%. These results come into effect approximately three years after starting lean adoption and peak after eight years. While the average abnormal profitability attributable to lean adoption is sizable, it varies significantly across firms and over time. This significant variation is compatible with firms' diverse ability to understand the complex inner workings of lean systems, and to design and implement them so that they improve profitability.

Research limitations/implications

The conceptualization of lean as enterprise-wide management system can be further refined to more effectively categorize the components of lean systems and investigate the nature of their relationships. Lean system adoption measurement can be fine-tuned to better capture cross-firm and longitudinal heterogeneity. Future work can explore other dependent variables of interest to different stakeholders including shareholders' value, employment and environmental and social sustainability.

Practical implications

The financial benefits of adopting lean can be reaped to the extent to which managers embrace lean as a philosophy and implement it pervasively in the organization. A firm can use the study's estimates as a basis for making calculations about the returns of investment in lean adoption. The paper also shows that “getting the lean system right” makes a significant difference in terms of abnormal profitability, which is twice as large for the best lean adopters..

Social implications

Compared with the promises of many lean proponents and supporters, the paper provides a more realistic view of what to expect from lean adoption in terms of profitability. Adopting lean as a comprehensive, enterprise-wide management system is not a universal panacea, but a complex endeavor, characterized by multiple complex decisions that require considerable capabilities, coordinated efforts and consistency of action.

Originality/value

Differently from extant research, this study does not study the correlation between the adoption of lean operation practices and financial performance but focuses on the abnormal profitability generated by the adoption of lean as a pervasive, enterprise-wide management system. Its research design allows to identify the differential profitability attributable to lean adoption and documents that it accrues non-linearly.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Lluìs Cuatrecasas, Takahiro Fujimoto, Daniel Jones, John Paul MacDuffie, Pietro Micheli, Fabio Quarato, Rachna Shah, John Shook, Desirée van Dun, Andrea Vinelli, Chris Voss, Peter Ward and James Womack for comments and suggestions. They also gratefully acknowledge financial support from ICRIOS-Bocconi University and the National Center for the Middle Market at the Ohio State University Fisher College of Business.

Citation

Camuffo, A. and Poletto, A. (2024), "Enterprise-wide lean management systems: a test of the abnormal profitability hypothesis", International Journal of Operations & Production Management, Vol. 44 No. 2, pp. 483-514. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOPM-10-2022-0646

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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