Direct Observation training teaches practitioners how to go to the Gemba (the real place of work) and systematically observe processes to identify waste, inefficiency, and improvement opportunities. Rather than relying on reports or assumptions, Direct Observation develops the discipline of seeing work as it actually happens — not as we think it happens.
Direct Observation training covers techniques including activity sampling, time-motion studies, spaghetti diagrams, work sampling, crew balance charts, and structured observation templates. Participants learn how to categorise activities as value-adding, non-value-adding, or necessary non-value-adding, and how to record data in a way that leads to actionable improvement insights.
Studies consistently show that in construction, only 30–40% of time on site is value-adding. Direct Observation gives teams the evidence-base to challenge this and redesign work. Without structured observation, inefficiencies remain invisible. With it, teams can prioritise the highest-impact improvements and demonstrate the cost of waste in concrete, measurable terms.
Direct Observation training is typically delivered as a 1-day workshop that combines classroom instruction with live observation exercises. The most effective format sends participants onto the shop floor or construction site during the training day to practise observation techniques in real time, then facilitates a group debrief to analyse findings.
Direct Observation training is ideal for Lean practitioners, continuous improvement leads, production engineers, site managers, and anyone responsible for improving workforce productivity. It is a core skill for Green Belt and Black Belt practitioners, and is increasingly required in construction organisations pursuing BIM Level 2+ and Lean site accreditation.