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Kaizen

Kaizen (a Japanese term meaning “good change” or “improvement”) is a philosophy of continuous, incremental improvement. Think of it as the art of getting just a tiny bit better, every single day. Originally pioneered by Japanese manufacturing giants like Toyota after World War II, Kaizen is not about revolutionary, overnight transformations. Instead, it focuses on making small, ongoing, positive changes to processes and systems. The magic of Kaizen lies in the compounding effect: these tiny tweaks accumulate over time to create massive long-term advantages in efficiency, quality, and productivity. For a value investing practitioner, understanding Kaizen is like having a secret lens. It helps you look beyond the quarterly earnings noise and identify companies with a deep-seated cultural advantage—a relentless drive to improve that can create enduring shareholder value. It’s a powerful antidote to short-term thinking, both for the companies you invest in and for your own investment process.

The Kaizen Philosophy in Business

In the corporate world, Kaizen is a team sport. It’s not a top-down decree from the CEO; it’s a bottom-up culture where every employee, from the assembly line worker to the senior manager, is encouraged to spot inefficiencies and suggest improvements. The famous Toyota Production System is the poster child for Kaizen in action. Toyota empowered its workers to stop the entire production line if they saw a defect, focusing on fixing the root cause of a problem rather than just patching up the symptom. This obsession with process refinement leads to incredible benefits:

A company with a true Kaizen culture isn't just running a business; it's constantly building a better one.

Spotting Kaizen as a Value Investor

A company that truly lives by Kaizen is building a formidable economic moat of operational excellence. But this quality doesn't always show up in a headline number. You have to be a bit of a detective.

How to Find the Clues

You can find evidence of a Kaizen culture by looking at both what the company says (qualitative) and what it does (quantitative).

Qualitative Signs

Read the company’s annual reports and shareholder letters with a critical eye. Look past the buzzwords and search for genuine commitment.

Quantitative Evidence

A culture of improvement should eventually translate into better numbers. Look for these trends over several years:

Kaizen for Your Own Investing Process

The most powerful application of Kaizen might be on yourself. Great investors are not born; they are built through a process of continuous learning and refinement. Instead of trying to become Warren Buffett overnight, aim to become a 1% better investor each week.

By applying Kaizen to your own habits, you turn the act of investing from a series of discrete bets into a lifelong journey of improvement.