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Workplace Management · 5S

5S Overview
Sort · Set in Order · Shine · Standardize · Sustain

From removing clutter to building a culture of continuous improvement, this visual note connects the five 5S pillars, implementation roles, key benefits, and practical audit methods.

Executive Summary

The core of 5S: turning organization into a sustainable work culture

5S is not just a clean-up campaign. It is a workplace management method that moves from removing what is unnecessary, to arranging what is needed, to cleaning as inspection, to standardizing the best way of working, and finally to sustaining the habit. The five steps work together to turn a one-time improvement activity into a long-term lean culture.

5Core pillar steps
SEach step starts with S
LowLow cost and easy to start
AllRequires employees and managers
!

Learning and Application Tips

  • 5S is not just housekeeping: the goal is to build a repeatable and sustainable management system.
  • The sequence matters: Sort must come before Set in Order. Otherwise, the team may only arrange the clutter more neatly.
  • Sustain is the hard part: many 5S programs fail at the fifth step because the routine does not become a daily habit.
The 5S Workflow

The Five-Step 5S Cycle

From removing clutter to building a culture, each step answers one practical question.

Step 1

Remove unnecessary items from the work area and keep only what is truly needed.

Sort · What should stay?
Step 2

Arrange items systematically so they are easy to find, use, and return.

Set in Order · Where should it go?
Step 3

Clean while inspecting the workplace and equipment to detect abnormalities early.

Shine · Is there a problem?
Step 4

Document the first three steps as repeatable standards and checklists.

Standardize · How do we lock it in?
Step 5

Keep executing, reviewing, and improving until 5S becomes a normal work habit.

Sustain · How do we keep it going?
01
The Five Pillars

5S Five Pillars

The five steps should be applied in order to create the full effect.

1
SORT
Remove clutter and separate necessary from unnecessary items.
2
SET IN ORDER
Place every item so it is easy to find, use, and return.
3
SHINE
Clean and inspect to find problems before they grow.
4
STANDARDIZE
Create repeatable routines, standards, and checklists.
5
SUSTAIN
Keep the routine alive until it becomes a daily habit.
Step-by-Step Notes
Step 1

Sort

  • Remove unnecessary items from the work area.
  • Separate necessary and unnecessary items.
  • Create a cleaner and more efficient workspace.
Step 2

Set in Order

  • Arrange every item systematically.
  • Make items easy to find, use, and return.
  • Use visual labels and fixed locations.
Step 3

Shine

  • Clean the workplace while inspecting it.
  • Find leaks, defects, and equipment issues early.
  • Strengthen ownership and responsibility.
Step 4

Standardize

  • Turn the first three steps into repeatable routines.
  • Create short and clear checklists.
  • Move 5S from an activity to a system.
Step 5

Sustain

  • Keep executing the standardized process.
  • Assign schedules, roles, and frequencies.
  • Use feedback to keep improving the routine.
Key Idea

Do not skip the sequence

  • Set in Order without Sort only organizes clutter.
  • Without Standardize, improvements cannot be repeated.
  • Without Sustain, the workplace returns to the old state.
5S
The final goal of 5S is a clean, safe, efficient, and continuously improving workplace. All five steps matter, and Sustain often determines whether the program succeeds.
02
Quick Reference

5S Reference Table

A compact view of each step and its management meaning.

Step English Core Concept
Step 1 Sort Remove clutter and separate necessary from unnecessary items.
Step 2 Set in Order Arrange items so they are easy to find, use, and return.
Step 3 Shine Clean and inspect to detect abnormalities and sources of problems.
Step 4 Standardize Build repeatable standards, routines, and checklists.
Step 5 Sustain Keep executing until the routine becomes a habit and culture.
03
Origin & Roles

Origin and Implementation Roles

5S succeeds when employees participate directly and managers provide sustained support.

5S

Origin: rooted in lean management culture

5S is closely associated with Toyota's lean management and continuous improvement culture. It is often used as a foundation for building a lean workplace.

Executors

Employee Role

Employees are the people who perform 5S in daily work.

  • Sort items and organize the work area.
  • Clean the workplace.
  • Maintain daily order.
Supporters

Manager Role

Managers make sure 5S can continue over time.

  • Define best practices and standards.
  • Encourage employees to integrate 5S into daily work.
  • Provide training, feedback, and support.
+
Shared participation is essential: employees do the work; managers sustain the system. Without either side, 5S is unlikely to become a culture.
04
Key Benefits

Main Benefits of 5S

5S is a practical starting point for process improvement because it is low cost, visible, and easy for teams to participate in.

$

Low cost

It does not require special equipment or extensive training, making it a useful foundation for improvement.

Better efficiency

It reduces time spent searching for items and makes work flow more smoothly.

%

Higher productivity

It improves performance by reducing waste and simplifying daily routines.

!

Improved safety

It lowers risks created by clutter, misplaced items, and equipment problems.

+

Higher morale

Participation, training, and feedback help employees feel more engaged.

L

Lean culture

It encourages everyone to build a workplace that is easier to use and easier to maintain.

05
In Practice

Practical Execution Checklist

The following checklist converts the five 5S steps into practical actions and audit points.

1
Sort
Remove clutter and keep what is truly needed
Purpose: separate necessary from unnecessary items and create a more efficient workspace.
  • Review all items in the work area.
  • Return misplaced items to the correct location.
  • Identify items that are no longer needed.
  • Use red tags for unnecessary items or items that need relocation.
  • Place necessary items where they can be reached easily.
2
Set in Order
Make items easy to find, use, and return
Purpose: optimize the workspace to improve efficiency and productivity.
  • Place frequently used items in easy-to-reach locations.
  • Group similar items logically.
  • Decide the best storage method for each category.
  • Use visual labels to identify item locations.
  • Use containers for small items.
  • Use outlines and labels to mark fixed positions for larger items.
?
Audit check: ask a colleague to find a specific item. If it can be found quickly, the arrangement is working. If not, the layout needs adjustment.
3
Shine
Cleaning is also inspection and prevention
Purpose: identify problems early and prevent defects or unexpected failures.
  • Use suitable cleaning tools and cleaning agents.
  • Clean the work area thoroughly.
  • Check for leaks, spills, debris, or contamination sources.
  • Identify the source of problems.
  • Inspect the condition of each item after cleaning.
  • Decide whether repair or maintenance is needed.
4
Standardize
Turn the first three steps into repeatable routines
Purpose: make 5S a continuous system instead of a one-time event.
  • Document the process in pairs: one person performs the task and the other records the steps.
  • Convert the process into simple documentation.
  • Use formats that are easy to understand.
  • Create short checklists.
  • Classify checklists by role, shift, or execution frequency where helpful.
5
Sustain
Make 5S a daily work habit
Purpose: make sure standardized 5S routines continue and keep improving.
  • Create an execution schedule.
  • Assign roles, shifts, and frequencies.
  • Use demonstrations so employees understand how to perform tasks.
  • Provide supervision while employees practice.
  • Use feedback to improve the process continuously.
!
Success factor: Sustain is often the most neglected step, but it determines whether the first four steps last.
06
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

The final aim of 5S is to build a clean, safe, efficient, and continuously improving workplace.

Nature
What is 5S?
A low-cost, high-impact management method
Goal
What does it achieve?
Less waste and higher productivity
Success
What makes it work?
Shared ownership by employees and managers
Core Summary

Five points to remember

  • 5S is a low-cost and high-impact workplace management method.
  • Its goal is to reduce waste and improve productivity through organization and standardization.
  • Successful 5S requires both employees and managers to participate.
  • The five pillars are Sort, Set in Order, Shine, Standardize, and Sustain.
  • 5S should move from a one-time improvement event to a sustainable lean culture.
One-sentence memory aid

Remove what is unnecessary, put what is necessary in the right place, clean to reveal problems, standardize the best way, and sustain the routine until it becomes culture.

Three Rules for Implementing 5S

Use these rules in every 5S implementation and audit checklist.

01 | Do not skip the order Sort before Set in Order. Without removing clutter first, the team is only arranging disorder.
02 | Standardization makes it repeatable Document the method and turn it into checklists so improvements do not disappear when people change.
03 | Sustain determines success 5S is not an event but a culture, supported by schedules, roles, feedback, and repeated practice.