XONITEK · Operational Excellence Workshops

The System That Builds
a High-Performance
Organization.

Operational Excellence Enterprise Readiness® System

Five Design Principles

  • Challenge definition and scoping conversation
  • Custom workshop template designed for your context
  • Company or program branding applied to all materials
  • Guidebook creation for workshop participants
  • Facilitator briefing and support
  • Option to certify internal moderators for ongoing delivery

01

PHASE ONE

Definition & Preparation

02

PHASE TWO

Building Capacity

03

PHASE THREE

Building Capability

04

PHASE FOUR

Business Readiness

40 Years of OpEx Experience

Program design & deployment across six continents since 1985

Integrated Learning

Retention maximised; students learn and earn simultaneously

No Corporate Bureaucracy

Scales organically — employees remain in their current roles

Benefit From Day One

Every student works on a live project during training

The System

A Complete Education & Training System — Not Just a Training Catalog

“Having a framework is not enough. Understanding how an Operational Excellence program is engineered and constructed is one thing. Rolling it out is quite another.”

The OpEx-ERS is the delivery system that brings the OpEx-ERM to life. Where the OpEx-ERM defines the architecture of a high-performance organization, the OpEx-ERS provides the structured education and training machinery to build it — phase by phase, team by team, project by project.

It is engineered around five principles that address the most common failure modes of OpEx programs: stall speed, bureaucratic bloat, misaligned training, curriculum inertia, and the absence of a governance structure that ties learning to results. Each principle is not optional — they work as a system. Remove one and the rest are compromised.

Before You Begin — Three Conditions Must All Be Met

1

Need: The organization genuinely requires the skills being developed — not aspirationally, but operationally.

2

Desire: The organization has the will and capacity to deploy newly skilled resources the moment they are created.

3

Priority: Building these capabilities is a genuine strategic priority — aligned to the organization’s vision, not a nice-to-have.

Program Maturity Levels

The OpEx-ERS moves your program through four progressive levels of maturity — each building on the last, none skippable.

PHASE 1

Established

PHASE 2

Logistical

PHASE 3

Tactical

PHASE 4

Strategic

Logistical = beginner-to-average Lean Six Sigma equivalent · Tactical = above-average CI equivalent · Strategic = high-performance organization

The Benchmark for Success

The OpEx-ERM Framework

Four Phases — From Definition to High-Performance Organization

The OpEx-ERM is the framework for a business operating system whose primary objective is to facilitate the achievement of an appropriate state of readiness — so that success is as preordained as possible. The four phases are sequential and non-negotiable in their order.

01

Phase One — The Most Critical

Program Definition & Preparation

Program Maturity: Established

The entire future state of the enterprise depends on a clear definition of success. If you were to accidentally stumble upon it, would you recognise it? This phase does the hard work of establishing the destination before departure.

  • Define what success looks like — tangible, understandable, achievable, and owned internally
  • Perform an honest present-state assessment to establish the baseline
  • Establish the vision, strategies, and alignment with organizational leadership
  • Define deployment tactics, logistics, and momentum-protection measures
  • Clarify corporate OpEx team roles — nimble, responsive, never bureaucratic
  • Confirm curriculum approach: procure proven material; do not build from scratch

02

Phase Two — Foundations

Building Capacity

Program Maturity: Logistical (Beginner-to-Average CI equivalent)

Trainees learn and incrementally apply a broad range of foundational skills. Using integrated (blended) learning, knowledge is built as efficiently and effectively as possible. Students work on live projects during — not after — training.

  • Integrated (blended) learning delivers foundations curriculum at maximum retention
  • Foundations Proficient — initial exposure and comprehension
  • Foundations Expert — applied understanding; project competency demonstrated
  • Foundations Competent — independent application; ready to lead projects
  • Project Review Board ensures every trainee has a live approved project during training
  • Benefits generated during training offset program costs from the start

03

Phase Three — Vertical Disciplines

Building Capability

Program Maturity: Tactical (Above-Average CI equivalent)

Advanced training focused on vertical disciplines aligned to the business’s functional smokestacks. Employees improve their efficiency and effectiveness as integrated resources of the whole enterprise.

  • Balance Sheet / Finance — financial literacy for OpEx practitioners
  • Revenue and Cost of Sales — customer-facing and commercial improvement
  • Cost of Goods Sold — manufacturing, operations, and supply chain
  • General and Administrative — overhead and support function optimisation
  • Periodic program audits ensure alignment with organizational strategy
  • Waypoint reviews confirm planned maturity milestones are being achieved

04

Phase Four — The Destination

Creating Business Readiness

Program Maturity: Strategic (High-Performance Organization)

All processes and systems across the business are working in an optimised and balanced fashion. The enterprise reaches a state of readiness where OpEx is not a program but the way the organization operates.

  • Enterprise-wide integration of OpEx thinking, tools, and culture
  • Horizontal integration across smokestacks — not just vertical optimisation
  • Strategic alignment: program efforts drive the vision, not just process metrics
  • Self-sustaining improvement cadence — no longer dependent on external support
  • Operational Excellence becomes the organization’s operating system, not a project
  • State of Readiness achieved — success as preordained as possible

Design Principle Two

Integrated (Blended) Learning

Maximum retention. Minimum cost. Benefit generated during training — not after.

How We Deliver

The Method That Makes Training an Investment, Not a Cost

Traditional training builds inventory for which there is no immediate requirement. Integrated learning builds capability that is applied the moment it is acquired.

Traditional methods of education and training send a cohort of trainees to a facility away from their normal place of work for an extended period, then return them to their roles to apply what they have learned — often weeks or months later, when much of what was learned has already been forgotten and the momentum of the original program has dissipated.

XONITEK’s integrated (blended) learning approach combines classroom instruction, on-the-job application, and peer learning in a structured cycle. Students learn a concept, then immediately apply it to a live project in their own working environment. The result is dramatically higher retention, near-term financial benefit, and a training program that pays for itself as it runs.

1

Learn

Concept introduced in a structured classroom or digital learning environment — concise, focused, practical.

2

Apply

Student immediately applies the concept to their live approved project in their own workplace — the same week.

3

Reflect & Share

Cohort reconvenes to share findings, troubleshoot challenges, and consolidate learning before the next concept.

4

Sustain

Qualified students are immediately assigned to subsequent projects — skills are never left idle and never atrophy.

The Failure Mode — Stall Speed

What happens when training precedes opportunity

Sixty Lean Six Sigma Black Belts trained over nine months. Not a single project completed. Not a single dollar of benefit generated. Some left the company — taking the investment with them.

The root cause: the company was building inventory for which there was no requirement. One of the primary rules of Lean is to not build inventory unless it is needed. That rule applies to investing in building skillsets in people too.

“Lose a day, lose a week. Lose a week, lose a month. Lose a month, lose a quarter. Lose a quarter, lose a year.”

The Integrated Learning Solution

Design Principle Three

Decentralized Scaling

Employees upskilled in place. No corporate consulting group. No bureaucratic overhead.

How We Scale

Scale Across the Organization — Without Building a Bureaucracy

The instinct in many organizations is to create a central OpEx team — a corporate-level group of trained practitioners who function as internal consultants, deployed to business units on request. This model feels efficient. In practice, it fails predictably.

It removes capable people from the work they were hired to do. It creates a team that is expensive to maintain and easy to cut in a downturn. It concentrates knowledge in a small, visible group rather than distributing it across the organization. And it creates a dynamic where business units wait for the internal consultants rather than developing their own capability.

The OpEx-ERS uses a fundamentally different model: employees receive additional OpEx skills and roles — but remain in their current positions. They apply their new capabilities to improvements within their own area. The program scales organically as more employees across more functions are trained. The corporate OpEx team remains small, nimble, and focused on governance and program management — not on delivering all the improvement work

Centralized Model — Avoid

The Corporate Consulting Group

Capable employees pulled from operational roles

Expensive central team — first cut in a downturn

Knowledge concentrated in few people

Business units become dependent rather than capable

Scales by growing headcount, not capability

Decentralised Model — OpEx-ERS

Distributed Capability

Employees upskilled and remain in current roles

Capability distributed across the whole organization

Each person owns improvement in their own area

No single point of failure or dependency

Scales by training more people, not adding headcount

How Decentralized Scaling Works in Practice

Year 1

Initial cohort trained at Foundations Proficient level. Each works on a PRB-approved project in their own work area. Benefits offset costs within the first year.

Year 2

First cohort advances to Expert and Competent levels. Second cohort begins Foundations. Improvement activity spreads across more functions and geographies.

Year 3+

Vertical capability building begins. Program reaches tactical maturity across the business. The corporate OpEx team governs and audits — it no longer needs to do all the work.

“The corporate team should remain nimble, agile, and responsive to the needs of the project teams — not grow into a new corporate bureaucracy.”

Design Principle Four

The Project Review Board

Governance that aligns every student to a live, strategically important improvement project.

Governance

The Governing Body That Connects Training to Results

The most common root cause of OpEx program failure is that the program’s efforts are not aligned to what is important to the company. The program becomes a nice-to-have rather than a need-to-have — easily cut when budget pressure arrives and not missed when it is gone.

The Project Review Board (PRB) exists to prevent this. It is the governance mechanism that ensures every training investment is tied to a project that matters to the business — not to the trainer’s preferences, the curriculum provider’s suggestions, or the OpEx team’s self-defined agenda.

The PRB meets regularly, is composed of senior leaders who understand what the business needs, and serves as both the champion and the compass of the program — building awareness of what is being accomplished, harvesting opportunities for improvement, and keeping the program perpetually aligned to the organization’s strategic priorities.

What happens without a PRB

The Four Functions of the PRB

Build Program Awareness

The PRB communicates the value of the program to the broader organization — making the business case, sharing results, and building the sponsorship that protects the program when priorities compete for resources.

Harvest Improvement Opportunities

The PRB maintains a prioritised pipeline of improvement projects — drawn from strategic business needs, not from what the OpEx team thinks needs doing. Every project on the list has a business case and a sponsor who owns the outcome.

Ensure Every Student Has an Approved Project

No student enters training without a scoped, approved project ready to work on. The PRB gates entry to training on this basis — guaranteeing that stall speed is structurally impossible and that benefits are generated from the first week of the program

Ensure Students Work on Subsequent Projects

The moment a student qualifies, the PRB assigns the next project. Skills are never left idle. The investment in each person compounds continuously — one project completion becomes the baseline for the next, and knowledge becomes wisdom through repeated application.

Design Principle Five

Proven Curriculum — Not Custom Built

Excellent today. Deployed now. Generating benefit while others are still writing modules.

The Curriculum Principle

You Are Unique. But Not Special.

“Le mieux est l’ennemi du bien.”

Voltaire — “The best is the enemy of the good.”

Your organization is genuinely unique in its specific circumstances — your market, your culture, your history, your people. But the fundamental challenges of operational excellence are not unique. The tools of Lean, the disciplines of Six Sigma, the principles of supply chain management, the frameworks of project governance — these are universal. Thousands of organizations have faced the same challenges, generated the same insights, and documented them in proven curriculum that has been peer-reviewed, continuously updated, and validated across industries.

The cost is never justified. The investment to develop, maintain, and update custom curriculum against a moving body of knowledge is so high it can never be cost-justified when proven material is available at a fraction of the price.

It is never finished. Custom curriculum is perpetually incomplete. There is always one more module needed. The perfect version never ships — and the organization waits for a program that never launches.

It is obsolete the moment it is done. The field continues to advance while the curriculum is being written. By the time the material is ready, it already requires updating.

It has no peer review. Commercial curriculum is validated across thousands of practitioners and continuously refined. Custom material is reviewed by the small team that wrote it — and reflects only their perspective.

The Four Functions of the PRB

Build Program Awareness

The PRB communicates the value of the program to the broader organization — making the business case, sharing results, and building the sponsorship that protects the program when priorities compete for resources.

Harvest Improvement Opportunities

The PRB maintains a prioritised pipeline of improvement projects — drawn from strategic business needs, not from what the OpEx team thinks needs doing. Every project on the list has a business case and a sponsor who owns the outcome.

Ensure Every Student Has an Approved Project

No student enters training without a scoped, approved project ready to work on. The PRB gates entry to training on this basis — guaranteeing that stall speed is structurally impossible and that benefits are generated from the first week of the program

Ensure Students Work on Subsequent Projects

The moment a student qualifies, the PRB assigns the next project. Skills are never left idle. The investment in each person compounds continuously — one project completion becomes the baseline for the next, and knowledge becomes wisdom through repeated application.

The Integrated System

How the Five Principles Work as One System

1

OpEx-ERM Framework

Define Success Before Departure

Phase 1 defines what success looks like — tangible, measurable, owned internally. Without this, the program has no compass. Every subsequent investment is at risk of being misdirected.

2

Proven Curriculum

Source Excellence — Deploy Now

Proven curriculum is procured and configured before training begins. No waiting for custom material that is never finished. Students enter training with excellent, peer-validated content — from day one.

3

Project Review Board

Approve Projects Before Training Begins

The PRB gates entry to training. No student begins without an approved, scoped, strategically aligned project ready to work on. The line between training investment and business benefit is guaranteed before the first day of class.

4

Integrated Learning · Phase 2

Learn and Apply Simultaneously — Building Capacity

Students learn foundational concepts and immediately apply them to their live project. Retention is maximised. Benefits are generated during training. Costs are offset as the programme runs. Stall speed is structurally prevented.

5

Decentralized Scaling · Phase 3

Spread Capability — Building Vertical Disciplines

Employees advance to vertical disciplines in their own functional area. Each remains in their current role. The programme scales by training more people — not by growing a central team. Capability distributes across the whole organisation.

6

Phase 4 — The Destination

Business Readiness — The High-Performance Organization

All five principles working together produce an organisation where Operational Excellence is not a programme — it is how the organisation operates. Success is as preordained as possible. The State of Readiness is achieved.

Begin The Journey

Build the Organization That Performs Today, Adapts Tomorrow, and Survives Anything.

“Understanding how an Operational Excellence programme is engineered is one thing. Rolling it out is quite another. XONITEK provides the system — and the experience to make it work.”

The OpEx-ERS is not a training catalogue or a consulting engagement. It is a complete, deployable system — purpose-built to take your organisation from its current state to a genuine state of operational readiness, phase by phase, project by project, person by person. XONITEK has been designing and deploying these programmes for 40 years, across six continents, for organisations from family businesses to multinational corporations.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Comprehensive answers about the OpEx-ERS — its structure, principles, and how it differs from conventional training programs.

The OpEx-ERS is XONITEK’s complete, deployable education and training system for Operational Excellence. Built on the four-phase OpEx-ERM framework, it integrates five design principles: the OpEx-ERM four-phase model; integrated (blended) learning that generates benefit during training; a decentralized scaling approach that keeps employees in their current roles; Project Review Board governance that ties every student to a live improvement project; and proven third-party curriculum that is deployable today, not custom-built over years.

Phase 1 (Program Definition and Preparation): define what success looks like, assess the present state, and establish deployment tactics. Phase 2 (Building Capacity): foundations-level education via integrated learning — Foundations Proficient, Expert, and Competent — reaching logistical maturity. Phase 3 (Building Capability): vertical-discipline training aligned to financial smokestacks, reaching tactical maturity. Phase 4 (Creating Business Readiness): enterprise-wide integration of OpEx, reaching strategic maturity — the high-performance organization.

Integrated (blended) learning combines classroom instruction, on-the-job application, and peer reflection in a structured cycle. Students learn a concept, immediately apply it to a live project in their own workplace, then reconvene to share findings and consolidate learning. This approach maximizes retention (because learning is immediately applied), minimizes cost (because classroom time is compressed and projects generate near-term benefit), and prevents stall speed — the failure mode where trained employees have no immediate project and lose their skills through disuse.

Stall speed is the failure mode where newly trained employees have no immediate project to apply their skills to — and the skills atrophy before they create any value. It is prevented by two structural mechanisms in the OpEx-ERS: first, the integrated learning model requires students to work on a live project during training, not after; second, the Project Review Board ensures every student has an approved, scoped project before training begins and is assigned subsequent projects the moment they qualify. Stall speed is not hoped against — it is made structurally impossible.

A centralized model creates a team that is expensive to maintain, concentrates knowledge in a small group, removes capable people from the roles they were hired for, and creates dependency rather than distributed capability. The OpEx-ERS uses a decentralized model: employees receive additional OpEx skills and remain in their current positions, applying new capabilities to improvement projects within their own areas. The program scales organically across the organization without growing a central function. The corporate OpEx team stays small and focused on governance — not on doing all the improvement work.

The PRB has four primary functions: (1) Building program awareness — communicating the value of the program and building senior sponsorship; (2) Harvesting improvement opportunities — maintaining a prioritized pipeline of projects aligned to strategic business priorities; (3) Ensuring every student has an approved project — gating entry to training so no one begins without a live, scoped, strategically aligned project ready to work on; and (4) Ensuring students work on subsequent projects — assigning the next project immediately upon qualification so skills are never left idle.

The most common root cause of OpEx program failure is that the program’s efforts are not aligned to what is important to the company. The program is viewed as a cost rather than a value-creator — and is cut when budget pressure arrives. The PRB addresses this directly by ensuring every project in the program is drawn from a strategic business need with a sponsor who owns the outcome. When senior leaders can see an unbroken line between the program’s activities and business value, the program becomes a need-to-have, not a nice-to-have.

Organizations that attempt to custom-build curriculum from scratch encounter four predictable failures: the cost can never be justified; the curriculum is never complete; whatever is finished is already obsolete; and the material has no peer review or external validation. A commercially available curriculum with a 90% fit is deployable today and generating benefit while the organization is still writing modules for its custom version. The OpEx-ERS sources proven, peer-reviewed curriculum and contextualizes it — typically a 90/5/5 approach. The last 5% gap is rarely worth the investment to close.

The 3-R’s Diagnostic and the OpEx-ERS serve complementary roles. The Diagnostic measures where the organization currently stands across Robustness, Readiness, and Resiliency — surfacing the gaps between what leadership believes and what frontline employees experience. The OpEx-ERS is the education and training system that closes those gaps: building operational capacity (Robustness), adaptive capability (Readiness), and sustained performance culture (Resiliency). The recommended approach: diagnose first with the 3-R’s Diagnostic to establish the priority baseline, then deploy the OpEx-ERS to address the identified gaps in the correct sequence.