Check the process where decisions, errors, and waste actually happen. Learn what gemba walking is, how to run it without making people feel inspected, which questions to ask your team, and how to connect shop floor observation with production data. If you are responsible for results, quality, or efficiency, a gemba walk helps you get to the source of a problem faster.
A report shows the number. A gemba walk helps you understand where that number came from.
Gemba Walk: What It Is and How It Differs From a Shop Floor Walkaround
A gemba walk means going to the place where the work is actually done. In manufacturing, that may be a production line, an operator workstation, a warehouse, quality control, maintenance, or packing. In services, it may be customer service, a lab, logistics, or an office where an order moves through the process.
“Gemba” means the real place. In Lean, decisions should be based on facts from the process, not only on reports, emails, and statements.
A good gemba walk follows three rules:
- go and see the process where it happens,
- ask questions before suggesting a change,
- respect the people doing the work.
The last rule shapes the quality of the conversation. If the team feels inspected, they will show you a version of the process prepared for the visit. If they feel that you want to remove obstacles, they will say more about what really blocks the work.
Lean Gemba Walk Helps You See Waste That Does Not Show Up in a Table
In Lean, it makes sense to look at the process through specific types of waste: waiting, rework, unnecessary motion, excess inventory, errors, overload, and unclear decisions.
A report usually shows the effect:
- lower OEE,
- longer cycle time,
- more defects,
- delayed order,
- setup time that takes too long,
- frequent micro-stops.
On site, you can check the cause. An operator may be waiting for a component. A team lead may be looking for information. A machine may be stopped, but the downtime code may be too general. Quality control may reject a batch because the error started two steps earlier.

Example With Numbers
If an operator waits 6 minutes for material, and this happens 80 times per week, you lose 480 minutes. That is 8 hours of work per week. Over a month, it adds up to more than 32 hours that may disappear in a report under a general label such as “work organization” or “missing material.”
Gemba walking helps name the waste clearly enough to fix it.
When to Do a Gemba Walk
A gemba walk makes the most sense when you want to check one specific thing.
Do it when:
- process results are dropping, but the cause is not clear,
- data from different shifts looks different,
- a problem keeps coming back despite earlier agreements,
- the team reports obstacles that are not visible in the system,
- a work standard exists in a document but does not work at the workstation,
- you are planning a change and want to see what may get in the way.
Do not go only to look at production. Go to check why setup takes 42 minutes instead of 25, why micro-stops are entered in bulk, or where rework starts after the first quality check. The narrower the question, the better the findings.
How to Run a Gemba Walk Without Making It Feel Like an Inspection
A gemba walk should not look like a manager walking through the area with a notebook and a list of mistakes. That can shut people down. Instead of facts, you will get careful answers. That is why it helps to plan the walk using the steps below.
1. Choose One Process and One Topic
Example topics:
- causes of micro-stops,
- waiting for material,
- setup time that takes too long,
- differences between shifts,
- source of quality defects,
- repeated rework.
One walk means one problem. Save the rest for later.
2. Check the Data Before You Enter the Shop Floor
Choose up to three numbers:
- OEE,
- cycle time,
- setup time,
- number of defects,
- downtime,
- most frequent stop reasons.
The data should point your observation in the right direction. It should not replace talking to people.
3. Tell the Team Why You Are There
A short sentence is enough: you want to see what makes the work harder in this process so that some waste can be removed. That message can change the atmosphere because the team knows you are not looking for someone to blame. You are looking for facts.
4. Observe First, Then Ask
For a few minutes, watch the process without interrupting. Write down what you see:
- how often someone waits,
- when someone leaves the workstation,
- where they look for a tool,
- when they rewrite data,
- when they correct an error,
- where the process depends on one person.
Look for a repeated pattern and do not stop at the first observation.
5. Ask Questions That Lead to Facts
Good questions during a gemba walk:
- What should this step look like?
- What most often gets in the way of doing it according to the standard?
- What do you wait for most often?
- Which information is unclear?
- Where is a mistake most likely to happen?
- What do you correct after the previous step?
- What small change would you test this week?
Avoid blame and questions such as “Why are you doing this wrong?” It is better to ask what makes it hard to follow the standard.
Kaizen Gemba Walk: From Observation to a Small Change
A kaizen gemba walk connects observation with a quick test of a small fix, such as one specific obstacle that can be checked with data.
Example
At one workstation, the operator walks 12 meters to get labels during every cycle. The process has 60 cycles per shift.
12 m × 60 cycles = 720 m per shift.
With two shifts and 20 working days, that equals 28.8 km per month spent walking just for labels.
Changing where the labels are stored can reduce motion, lower fatigue, and limit mistakes. It is a small decision, but it is based on observation and a simple number.
After a gemba walk, agree right away on:
- what you will test,
- who is responsible for the test,
- how long you will measure the effect,
- which number will be used to judge the change,
- whether the new way of working should become part of the standard.
With that plan, the walk can become the start of a better process.
Gemba Walk in Lean Management and Production Data
Gemba walk in Lean management works best when you connect two things: observation on site and process data. Observation tells you what is happening, and data shows the scale of the problem.
Example: During a gemba walk, you see that operators enter downtime reasons too generally. In the system, many stops go into one category, such as “other.” On the shop floor, it turns out that this one word covers three different situations: missing component, waiting for the team lead’s decision, and machine adjustment.
After changing the downtime codes, you can check which problem costs the most time and base the decision on hard data.
Gemba walk helps you see the problem, but data shows its scale: downtime, stop frequency, impact on OEE, and differences between shifts. If you want to move from observation to number-based decisions, check how to monitor OEE, downtime, and production data in real time.
Want to base your gemba walk on data? See how an MES system can help.
Quick Diagnosis Table for a Gemba Walk
| What you see on site | What it may mean | What to ask |
|---|---|---|
| The operator often leaves the workstation | Materials or tools are placed in the wrong spot | What do you most often leave the workstation for? |
| The machine is stopped, but the report reason is general | Downtime codes do not describe real situations | What exactly happened before the stop? |
| Data is entered twice | The process collects information mainly for the report | Who uses this data later? |
| Defects keep coming back after the same step | The work standard does not protect against the error | At what point is a mistake most likely to happen? |
| The team lead keeps making small decisions | The team does not have clear rules for action | Which decisions most often block the work? |
Most Common Mistakes During Gemba Walking
You lose the most value when a gemba walk turns into checking people.
Avoid these mistakes:
Topic Too Broad
“We are checking production” is too much. “We are checking the causes of downtime on line A” works better.
Correcting People Too Quickly at the Workstation
First understand the working conditions. Decide later.
Talking Only to the Team Lead
The team lead sees part of the process. The operator sees details that often decide where waste starts.
No Follow-Up
If the team reports a problem and hears nothing about what happens next, the next walk will be treated as a formality.
Taking Notes With No Decision
A gemba walk should end with a small test, a change in the standard, or a decision about what is still missing before a conclusion can be made.
A 45-Minute Plan for Your First Gemba Walk
The first gemba walk does not have to be long. What matters is that it leads to a result.
- 10 minutes: check the data, such as OEE, downtime, defects, and cycle time.
- 5 minutes: tell the team which problem you want to understand.
- 15 minutes: observe the process without interrupting the work.
- 10 minutes: talk with the person doing the task and with the team lead.
- 5 minutes: write down one change to test.
After 7 days, go back to the same place and check whether the change worked and whether the numbers confirm it.
What Your Next Step Can Be for Gemba Walking
Choose one process that costs time today, creates defects, or blocks the team. Check the data, go to the place where the work happens, ask a few good questions, and write down one thing to test.
A good gemba walk should end with one decision, one test, and one number that shows whether the process is really working better.
If, after your first walk, you see many problems but do not have reliable data on their scale, the next step may be real-time OEE and downtime monitoring.

FAQ
What is a gemba walk?
A gemba walk means going to the place where the work is done, observing the process, and talking with the team. The goal is to understand the facts before making a decision.
Does gemba walking work only in manufacturing?
No. Gemba can be a shop floor, warehouse, lab, service area, customer service office, or administrative process. What matters is the place where value is created for the customer.
How is Lean gemba walk different from an audit?
An audit checks compliance with requirements. Lean gemba walk helps you see how the process works in daily work, where waste appears, and what blocks the team.
How often should you do a gemba walk?
For a stable process, a fixed rhythm can work well, for example once a week. For a quality issue, downtime problem, or major change, shorter walks over several days may work better.
How can you connect kaizen gemba walk with OEE?
After the walk, choose one change and assign a measure to it: downtime, setup time, number of defects, OEE, or stop reason. That way, you can see whether the observation actually led to a process improvement.
Want to improve your production with Lean and gemba walking? We can help.
Learn more about manufacturing on the explitia blog.