Hoshin Kanri X-Matrix Drives Engineering Leadership Program Success

Universities with technical leadership development programs are challenged with demonstrating the effectiveness of these training programs with measurable results. This is an especially daunting task given the fact that we are trying to inspire undergraduate students who already feel over-burdened by a rigorous major and little to no work experience to know the value that leadership skills can bring to their career. The solution is to apply the Hoshin Kanri X-matrix to the leadership development program so the students can understand how their individual leadership efforts in their own student organizations benefit the entire leadership training program and teach them how to use this valuable engineering tool as a future technical leader. Participants in Southern Illinois University Carbondale’s (SIUC’s) Leadership Development Program (LDP) are community college transfer students that are seeking a Bachelors of Science degree in an engineering or technology discipline. They have expressed an interest in developing technical leadership skills and were selected for the scholarship and training program through a competitive process that examined their leadership achievements prior to being selected. There have been a total of 32 students participate in the program since fall 2010, with 12 in the current group. There has been a total of 42 participants since the start of the program in 2007 (i.e., the program was conceived in 2006, and the first cohort began in 2007). The students represent a cross-section of two technology and five engineering majors. Participants choose a student organization in the College of Engineering (e.g., Society of Women in Engineering) in which they would like to lead. A student then has their peers assess their leadership effectiveness through the results of the organization’s projects. This information is then recorded in the LDP’s X-matrix. The LDP has used the X-matrix over the past three years and the results illustrate a progressive improvement in the overall efficacy of the program each year. The quantitative results demonstrate that students are improving their engineering leadership skills as the program continues to mature. The implications of integrating the X-matrix into a technical leadership development program are many; (1) it becomes a motivational tool that helps participants relate their efforts to become a leader and its impact on their chosen student organization, (2) it develops their understanding of their responsibility to the larger organization, (3) it develops their leadership communication abilities and (4) it develops their skill in using a valuable organizational management tool that can be applied throughout their professional career. Training future technical leaders to apply engineering management tools while in college should lead to greater success for student development, their projects, their college, the leadership program, their employers, and their countries. Introduction Developing the next generation of engineering leaders is an economic imperative that is shared by most countries. The National Academy of Engineering 1 (NAE), Engineer of 2020 initiative emphasizes the need for future engineers to work in a technologically advanced global economy that is constantly changing. A goal of the initiative is “to educate technically proficient engineers who are broadly educated, see themselves as global citizens, can be leaders in business and public service, and who are ethically grounded.” 1 (p. 51). Universities have responded to this P ge 24672.2 imperative by creating technical leadership development programs 2 . SIUC’S College of Engineering also responded by creating its Leadership Development Program (LDP) in 2006 with the support from Advanced Technology Services (ATS) and later, the National Science Foundation. While creating a technical leadership development program is an important first step, the efficacy of such a program is the most important outcome and wherein lies the greatest challenge. SIUC’S College of Engineering has adapted an engineering management tool, Hoshin Kanri X-matrix, to effectively manage the large scale program, to teach students how to use this important tool, and to quantitatively demonstrate the efficacy and impact of the program, while meeting the motivational needs of the college’s student leaders to perform at their best (see Figure 1). Figure 1 Process of integrating the X-Matrix into the LDP The Leadership Development Program The LDP is a rigorous two year training program that teaches students character, interpersonal, team-building, and leadership skills. While there is some classroom based education in the program, the program director believes that leadership is best learned when students apply it to leading their project teams, such as ASCE Steel Bridge, Concrete Canoe, and SAE Baja competitions. Many of the students serve as leaders and presidents of the College’s Registered Student Organizations (RSO) project teams. The program uses a selection process and is open to community college transfer students with Junior standing. First year students (Juniors) learn to lead themselves and projects of short duration. Examples of learning to lead themselves include arriving early and prepared for every meeting, learning to hold themselves accountable, and adopting the cultural values of the LDP. Examples of leading short-term projects include achieving excellence in organizing a campus blood drive, river clean up, trail maintenance, community clean up, Habitat for Humanity build, and a food bank work day. Team members experience a lot of personal growth their first year in Relevant Experience (Motivation) Engineering Management Tool (X-Matrix) Engineering Leadership (LDP X-Matrix)