Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Blogrige

The Official Baldrige Blog

A Manufacturing Sector Leader Talks about the “Power of the Baldrige Framework”

Manufacturing engineering using virtual reality AI to improve management efficiency quality for machinery.
AME President/CEO, Kim Humphrey photo
Kim Humphrey, AME President and CEO

A nonprofit serving manufacturers that has generously supported the Baldrige Enterprise is AME (Association for Manufacturing Excellence), which comprises 4,000 manufacturing members ranging from executives to senior and middle managers. AME President and CEO Kim Humphrey not only leads AME but is a board member for the Baldrige-based U.S. Senate Productivity and Quality Award, a member of the Alliance for Performance Excellence, the network of Baldrige-based state and sector programs. 

I recently had the pleasure of interviewing Kim on how she sees the synergy of manufacturing and Baldrige, and how we all can work together to support the U.S. economy.

Can you please describe your roles in AME and the Senate Productivity and Quality Award?

I have served as the president/CEO of AME (Association for Manufacturing Excellence) since February 2020. AME is the premier organization for the exchange of knowledge in enterprise excellence [defined by AME as “improving operations while creating an inclusive, engaging environment”]. Members come together to explore Lean thinking and other enterprise improvement methods, exchange best practices, and network to improve the competitiveness and overall value of their organizations.

Since our creation as a nonprofit in 1985, AME has envisioned a renaissance driven by people-centric leadership coupled with enterprise excellence. Our mission is to inspire a commitment to enterprise excellence through experiential learning by bringing people together to share, learn, and grow.

For over 20 years, I have also been a board member for the United States Senate Productivity and Quality Award (SPQA) and have served in many other roles, too, including [award evaluation] examiner, team lead, trainer, and, most recently, vice chair of strategy. For more than three decades, the SPQA program has helped organizations in Virginia and Washington, D.C., achieve better results. We use the Baldrige Excellence Framework® as the foundation in our efforts. Our mission is to promote continual improvement strategies and provide training, mentoring, and recognition to organizations in pursuit of performance excellence.

I have also served as a national Baldrige examiner and am a firm believer in the power of the Baldrige framework to improve organizational performance to obtain sustainable results.

What do you see as the challenges for U.S. manufactures today?

There are many challenges and opportunities facing U.S. manufactures today. Some of the most predominant ones include the following:

Workforce Disruption
We are witnessing unprecedented changes in all issues surrounding our ability to attract, recruit, develop, and retain top talent. From the pandemic-related recognition of frontline workers to the continued conversation of work-from-home, to upward pressure on wages, to high levels of team member turnover and worker shortages, the conversation relative to our workforces has changed fundamentally. One way to address this, particularly regarding retention, is to provide a “Meaningful Employment Environment” (white paper by AME Board Member Robert Martichenko). We have learned the importance of dignity, respect, empathy, relationships, and critical thinking relative to the role that people play in all of our operations, regardless of the level of technology or automation in our industry. It is critical that the way we treat people remains at the center of the narrative. 

How do we cultivate cultures of respect for every individual? What more can be done to ensure that our employees not only have the resources needed to survive—but also to thrive and grow professionally? 

We must create environments where workers are proud to represent our various missions—where employee retention is high because structural and cultural foundations are in place to invest in talent and enable the organization to thrive.

Supply Chain Disruptions
The impact is significant, causing shortages and increased costs. What we see as a remedy is an emphasis on reshoring, near-shoring, and LeanShoring™ [defined by AME as considering the economic sense of keeping supply chains local when looking at the total cost of offshoring]. By adopting LeanShoring™ practices, organizations can reduce domestic manufacturing cost by eliminating waste in their current processes—including anything that does not provide value to the end-customer—while driving an enterprise-wide continuous improvement process.

Fast-paced Changes in Technology, Industry 4.0 Innovations, and AI 
Some manufacturers are implementing advanced technologies and integrating them seamlessly into existing operations. This creates the added benefit of attracting more tech-savvy team members and enhancing innovation, which aligns with the Baldrige core value and concept managing for innovationThe Baldrige approach to innovation emphasizes both cultural/people and process aspects of achieving successful innovation and provides the linkages to ensure process and people are aligned.

There are other challenges today around energy and cybersecurity that organizations face daily, and organizations like AME and Baldrige are the best resources to gain valuable insight from industry subject-matter experts. 

What do you see as the intersection of value for U.S. manufacturing and AME and Baldrige products and services? 

The Baldrige framework and the AME model both focus on organizational continuous improvement and operational and performance excellence. While the Baldrige model encourages a systematic approach to improving performance in all aspects of an organization (such as leadership, customer engagement, and knowledge management), AME’s approach is more focused on Lean principles and practices aimed at improving processes. 

Both models require leadership involvement, workforce engagement, and customer focus. These are complementary products and services, and I am proud that AME supports Baldrige for our companies. Organizations can use the Baldrige framework and AME’s Lean Sensei® to improve the way they operate and to help assess where they are in their journey. 

What do you hope for the future of AME, the Senate Productivity and Quality Award, and Baldrige?

My vision is that we collaborate by bringing the best of our organizations to industry—whether it is health care, manufacturing, nonprofit, educational, or government entities—to help them grow and improve. Organizations that integrate both Baldrige and AME practices can benefit from a dual focus on holistic performance excellence (Baldrige) and lean, efficient operations (AME). This combination leads to enhanced leadership alignment, continuous improvement, operational excellence, and long-term sustainability. Our organizations are here to help industry improve in their continuous improvement journey, and I believe that by working together we will impact more organizations.  

How can organizations interested in U.S. manufacturing learn more about AME and strategies to support manufacturers and other leaders?

Check us out at ame.org or you can reach out to me at khumphrey [at] ame.org (khumphrey[at]ame[dot]org). They can also attend our workshops, tours, and events throughout the country, such as the Baldrige and AME conferences to network with industry professionals and learn best practices. For example, the AME International Conference in Atlanta this October is an exciting and educational time. Join us as we CONNECT. EVOLVE. TRANSFORM and learn from sessions around developing an evolving workforce, continuous improvement tools, and culture; nurturing thriving, learning organizations; coaching the practice of problem-solving together; and integrating people and AI.

AME and Baldrige inspire me to be part of the movement to make organizations better, and I believe once organizations get to know us, they will see our value to the organization. I am so incredibly proud of what we do for organizations and know you will as well. 
 


Join us at the Quest for Excellence® 2025!

The Quest for Excellence Conference March 20 - April 2, 2025, Baltimore Marriott Waterfront Baltimore, MD, prepare. adapt. innovate. thrive.

The Quest for Excellence® Conference

Sunday, March 30–Wednesday, April 2, 2025  |  #BaldrigeQuest

The conference will feature new and exciting opportunities to learn role-model best practices from nationally recognized thought leaders, Baldrige Award recipients, and representatives from other high-performing organizations. Conference highlights include engaging and thought-provoking keynote speakers, plenary sessions featuring the 2024 Baldrige Award Recipients, and concurrent sessions focusing on relevant topics of interest, such as leadership and social responsibility, operational continuity and resilience, workforce issues, and customers and strategy. 

Registration Opens in November

Learn More
 


About the author

Dawn Bailey

Dawn Bailey is a writer/editor for the Baldrige Program and involved in all aspects of communications, from leading the Baldrige Executive Fellows program to managing the direction of case studies, social media efforts, and assessment teams. She has more than 25 years of experience, 18 years at the Baldrige Program. Her background is in English and journalism, with degrees from the University of Connecticut and an advanced degree from George Mason University.

Related posts

Happy Thanksgiving 2024

The Baldrige Performance Excellence Program gives thanks to the entire Baldrige community, especially our advisory board (Board of Overseers) and all-volunteer

Signs

How do you treat signs when you are driving your car? Are you a strict rule follower? Does a stop sign cause you to come to a full stop, or a rolling stop, or

Comments

Add new comment

CAPTCHA
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Please be respectful when posting comments. We will post all comments without editing as long as they are appropriate for a public, family friendly website, are on topic and do not contain profanity, personal attacks, misleading or false information/accusations or promote specific commercial products, services or organizations. Comments that violate our comment policy or include links to non-government organizations/web pages will not be posted.