Kaizen
Kaizen (改善) means “change for better.” It’s continuous, incremental improvement. A mindset and a practice: improve a little every day instead of waiting for the perfect plan or the big push.
Origins in Manufacturing
Kaizen emerged in post-war Japan as a management philosophy at Toyota1. The idea was radical in its simplicity: every employee, from the assembly line to the executive floor, should look for small improvements every single day.
The principles were straightforward:
- Small experiments over grand plans
- Quick feedback over long review cycles
- Steady refinement over dramatic overhauls
These same principles later influenced lean manufacturing, agile software development, and countless productivity systems.
Kaizen for Personal Work
The same idea applies to habits and creative work. One small edit, one short session, one clear next step is enough. Consistency matters more than intensity.
The 1% Rule
If you improve by 1% each day, after a year you’re 37 times better2. The math is compelling, but the real insight is psychological: small improvements don’t trigger resistance. Your brain doesn’t fight a five-minute writing session the way it fights a two-hour commitment.
Practical Applications
| Area | Big change (hard) | Kaizen approach (sustainable) |
|---|---|---|
| Writing | ”Write 2,000 words a day” | Write one paragraph after morning coffee |
| Exercise | ”Go to the gym 5x/week” | Do 10 pushups before your shower |
| Reading | ”Read 50 books this year” | Read one page before bed |
| Note-taking | ”Reorganize my entire vault” | Link one note to another each day |
Why It Works
The appeal of kaizen is that it’s sustainable. Big, sudden changes are hard to maintain; small steps compound without burning you out. You don’t need to be twice as good tomorrow. Just a bit better than yesterday.
Most people overestimate what they can do in a day and underestimate what they can do in a year. Kaizen respects this asymmetry.
Kaizen and Purpose
There’s a natural connection between kaizen and ikigai. The daily practice of improving, even in tiny ways, creates a sense of forward motion. That feeling of progress is itself a source of meaning.
Building a second brain is kaizen applied to knowledge. Every note captured, every link made, every review completed is a small improvement to your thinking infrastructure.