Imagine a workplace where everything has a place, workflows are smooth, and productivity soars. Teams move with confidence, safety incidents drop, and customer orders flow faster than ever. This isn’t a pipe dream—it’s the power of 5S when truly embedded in your organisation. Companies that get 5S right often see dramatic improvements in culture, flow, efficiency, safety and even sales, as teams spend less time searching and more time adding value.
Yet here’s the stark reality: up to 90% of 5S initiatives fail to stick. Despite the clear benefits, too many implementations fall into the trap of becoming superficial “clean-up exercises” rather than a sustainable way of working. So how can organisations overcome this trend and turn 5S into a lasting advantage?
The key lies in involvement, visibility, leadership engagement, and coaching.
Here’s how to do it.
For 5S to succeed, it cannot be imposed from the top down—it must be owned by the people who work in the areas every day. Involving front-line team members from the start ensures that improvements are practical, sustainable, and aligned with real work processes.
When front-line team members are actively involved, 5S becomes a tool for achieving real results, not just a set of rules to follow.
Start by bringing 5S into the heart of your team’s daily rhythm. Incorporate a 5S standard review into your team’s visual board so it’s no longer a back-office task but a living part of daily work.
When 5S is visible and part of the team’s rhythm, it starts to influence behaviour naturally and consistently.
3. Leadership Engagement: Look, Listen, Learn
Leadership is the linchpin of sustainable 5S. The most effective leaders don’t audit, they look, listen, and learn through regular Gemba walks or Look Listen Learn sessions. Through these sessions they reflect on their own behaviours, what they can do to help the team.
This approach transforms leadership from policing compliance to mentoring and supporting teams, which is critical for embedding 5S into the culture.
4. Coaching for Continuous Improvement
Embedding 5S is not about enforcing rules—it’s about coaching for sustainable habits:
When leaders actively coach teams based on observations, they create a culture of accountability and continuous improvement.
5. Make 5S Part of the Culture
Finally, 5S must become part of your organisation’s DNA, not just a checklist:
When 5S is truly embedded, it transforms the workplace into an environment of clarity, flow, quality, safety and productivity, driving both business results and employee satisfaction.
In Conclusion
5S has the power to revolutionise how teams work—boosting culture, flow, productivity, and even sales. The difference between success and failure lies in making it visible, involving front-line teams, engaging leadership, and coaching continuously. By following these steps, organisations can move from the staggering 90% failure rate to making 5S a sustainable competitive advantage.