By Ranjith Rajendran
Private equity (PE) firms used to focus on quick financial wins—buying companies, making fast changes, and selling within a few years for rapid ROI. PE firms are now looking beyond equipment efficiencies and waste reduction toward holistic strategies that encompass their full portfolios. As a result, cultural change has become a key ingredient in this new era of value creation. Historically ignored by PE firms, organizational culture is now on the radar of the savviest firms, which recognize its essential role in driving continuous improvement.
Kaizen is a powerful tool for building a culture of continuous improvement. Instead of just boosting productivity or cutting waste, kaizen transforms how teams work together, increasing morale, engagement, and innovation.
Key principles of kaizen:
A kaizen event brings a cross-functional team together to tackle a specific problem, test solutions, and measure results—often in less than a week. At the end, the team and leadership decide whether to keep, tweak, or drop the new process.
Because of its focus on people and processes, kaizen is fundamentally a culture-change program, not just a productivity initiative. It’s designed to shift the organization’s way of thinking, operating and approaching challenges away from mechanics and metrics toward adaptability and agility.
PE firms can implement kaizen across their portfolios, drawing on collective expertise and diverse perspectives. By making continuous improvement part of the culture, firms unlock hidden value and create a cycle of growth that goes far beyond traditional cost-cutting. Continue reading this article by our Managing Director of U.S. Private Equity Practice, Ranjith Rajendran in Assembly Magazine.


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