debodine
Electrical
- Sep 23, 2004
- 608
Sorry in advance for the long background info blurb below, but I am trying to give potential responders enough information to help them focus their responses without having to do a lot of back and forth posts.
My company has decided to invest in LEAN operations and engineering. I am a project engineer, not management, but I would like to show my willingness to support the process by obtaining a LEAN certification on my own if possible.
I have searched the internet for the basics as well as searching and reading the threads here on Eng-Tips.
I have found LEAN Certification programs from which has Bronze, Silver and Gold certifications that would cost me a few thousand to go all the way to the top (Gold), and I found which has a Project Management LEAN rating of Expert on sale for $99 at this time.
I realize you get what you pay for so I am assuming that the $99 rating is similar to the diploma mills we often read about on these forums, so I will consider that an outlier and drop it. But is the most cost effective way to go for a genuine, industry recognized LEAN certification?
I am not deliberately trying to slam as I don't know anything about them, and if I was confident I would receive an industry accepted LEAN certification for only $99 I would jump at the chance. But experience has taught me that such a large gap in costs usually means the low cost options would be regarded in a similar manner to an undergraduate engineering degree from a non-ABET online course...in other words, not considered to be "the real thing" (and usually for good reason).
I don't want to go to management with a LEAN certification that gets me laughed at for being a diploma mill (again that is only my assumption), but I don't want to spend thousands out of my own pocket if hundreds (or less) will do.
So after all that background, my question is this: Is the "gold standard" in the LEAN industry and all others pale by comparison, so I should pay the bucks to get the best? Or are there other options out there that you who live and breathe LEAN can suggest that I currently don't have the knowledge to recognize on my own as a good certification program for me?
Thanks for your consideration,
debodine
My company has decided to invest in LEAN operations and engineering. I am a project engineer, not management, but I would like to show my willingness to support the process by obtaining a LEAN certification on my own if possible.
I have searched the internet for the basics as well as searching and reading the threads here on Eng-Tips.
I have found LEAN Certification programs from which has Bronze, Silver and Gold certifications that would cost me a few thousand to go all the way to the top (Gold), and I found which has a Project Management LEAN rating of Expert on sale for $99 at this time.
I realize you get what you pay for so I am assuming that the $99 rating is similar to the diploma mills we often read about on these forums, so I will consider that an outlier and drop it. But is the most cost effective way to go for a genuine, industry recognized LEAN certification?
I am not deliberately trying to slam as I don't know anything about them, and if I was confident I would receive an industry accepted LEAN certification for only $99 I would jump at the chance. But experience has taught me that such a large gap in costs usually means the low cost options would be regarded in a similar manner to an undergraduate engineering degree from a non-ABET online course...in other words, not considered to be "the real thing" (and usually for good reason).
I don't want to go to management with a LEAN certification that gets me laughed at for being a diploma mill (again that is only my assumption), but I don't want to spend thousands out of my own pocket if hundreds (or less) will do.
So after all that background, my question is this: Is the "gold standard" in the LEAN industry and all others pale by comparison, so I should pay the bucks to get the best? Or are there other options out there that you who live and breathe LEAN can suggest that I currently don't have the knowledge to recognize on my own as a good certification program for me?
Thanks for your consideration,
debodine