A Weekstart is a structured Lean management routine that brings leaders and teams together at the beginning of each week. Its main purpose is to align priorities, review performance, and identify potential obstacles before they impact operations. While similar in spirit to the daily stand up, the weekstart operates at a higher level, focusing more on planning, coordination, and leadership alignment.
The weekstart concept stems from Lean’s emphasis on communication, transparency, and continuous improvement. Unlike traditional status meetings, weekstarts are concise, visual, and action oriented. They allow team leaders and supervisors to step back from daily firefighting and take a strategic view of the week ahead. In Lean environments, the weekstart complements the daily stand up by connecting operational activities with tactical and managerial priorities.
Objectives:
Core Questions:
Format: Short, structured, and visual. Often conducted around a performance board showing KPIs, projects, and improvement actions.
While both meetings enhance communication and teamwork, they serve different purposes.
The Daily Stand Up is operational, designed for all team members to coordinate daily work, discuss immediate tasks, and remove small blockers.
The Weekstart is tactical, primarily for team leaders, supervisors, and cross functional coordinators to review overall performance, align direction, and anticipate challenges for the week.
Together, they form a tiered communication structure that links daily execution to long term goals.
Manufacturing: Team leaders meet each Monday to review production targets, quality metrics, and shift coordination.
Healthcare: Department heads align weekly priorities across wards or clinics.
Office Teams: Project leads and managers synchronise plans, workloads, and improvement initiatives.
Weekstarts improve leadership alignment, promote proactive problem solving, and strengthen coordination across teams. They ensure that everyone, from operators to managers, works toward shared weekly objectives. As part of a Lean culture, they build discipline, accountability, and a rhythm of continuous improvement.
Implementation
Timing: Held on the first working day of the week, typically lasting 15 to 30 minutes.
Participants: Usually team leaders, supervisors, or managers; operators may join when relevant.
Documentation: Key decisions, priorities, and issues are recorded and reviewed in the next weekstart.