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BONUS: Katie Anderson, Toyota's Real Secret Isn't the Tools — It's the Attitude Towards Learning That Changes Everything Katie Anderson joins us to explore the real engine behind Toyota's legendary success — and it's not what most people think. Drawing from her years living in Japan and her close relationship with 40-year Toyota veteran Isao Yoshino, Katie reveals why tools alone will never create lasting transformation. We explore the Doer Trap, the Telling Habit, and why hansei (deep reflection) is the most productive practice leaders keep skipping. The Only Secret to Toyota "The only secret to Toyota is its attitude towards learning. We don't even notice, and we take it for granted." Katie moved to Japan over 11 years ago as a continuous improvement practitioner and got to know Isao Yoshino, a Toyota leader with 40 years of experience. After repeatedly asking him what made Toyota so successful, he finally offered an almost offhand answer: "The only secret to Toyota is its attitude towards learning." The deeper insight? Even inside Toyota, they barely noticed it — it was so embedded in how they worked that they took it for granted. Katie explains that most organizations copy the visible tools — the kanban boards, the value streams, the process maps — but miss the invisible layer underneath: people development. Without that foundation of learning, tools lead to project-based improvements that never sustain. The secret sauce is the quality of how organizations develop people to learn, contribute, problem-solve, and innovate. That system of people development underlies the system of process improvement, and without it, organizations stay stuck in what Katie calls "constant whack-a-mole" — fixing the same problems year after year. The Doer Trap and the Five Archetypes "The doer trap is when we're stepping in and doing things, or owning things that aren't ours to own." Katie identifies five archetypes of the Doer Trap that leaders and change agents fall into. The Hero is the firefighter who jumps from crisis to crisis — it feels good to save the day. The Rescuer can't stand watching people struggle, so they give answers too early, robbing others of the chance to develop their own thinking. The Magician works behind the scenes, subtly shaping outcomes without others' input. The Pair of Hands just jumps in and gets it done because "it's faster." And the Surrogate Leader fills a leadership vacuum that isn't theirs to fill — so when they move on, everything fades away. Each archetype feels productive in the moment but prevents the organization from building real capability. The shift Katie advocates is from command-based leadership to influence-based leadership: still setting direction, but creating the conditions for others to find the way there. Break the Telling Habit "The telling habit is when we're giving our answer instead of holding space for someone else to develop their answer." Closely linked to the Doer Trap, the Telling Habit is about how leaders — and change agents — default to providing their own ideas, suggestions, and solutions instead of creating space for others to think. Katie sees this show up even in well-intentioned coaches and consultants. The antidote aligns with what David Marquet calls intent-based leadership: instead of telling people what to do, you validate their thinking and ask questions when you spot gaps. Katie frames good leadership through three responsibilities drawn from Mr. Yoshino's example: set the direction (what goal needs to be achieved), provide support (create the capability and conditions for people to succeed), and develop yourself (because if you can't see the system, you can't help others see it either). Learning as Sustainable Competitive Advantage "We need to set up experiments. And experiments are fundamentally based on an attitude towards learning." Katie argues that as complexity increases, no single leader can hold all the answers. Organizations need to harness what you might call the collective brain — the hive mind of the team — and that requires an experimental mindset. This connects directly to Jeffrey Liker's concept of organizations as socio-technical systems: it's never just the technical processes that matter, but how people interact, influence each other, and navigate the formal and informal structures that actually get things done. Katie's advice to change leaders: develop your own systems thinking skills first. Help leaders see what's really driving behavior — reward structures, people development gaps, the difference between compliance and genuine capability. Everything starts with you. Hansei — Reflection as the Most Productive Practice "The study and adjust part of the cycle is where the learning happens. But we keep cutting it because the doing part feels more productive." Hansei — Japanese for deep...