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Choosing the right Lean Six Sigma belt is a critical step for both individuals and organisations. The right choice ensures that training aligns with experience, role, and business need – and that improvement projects deliver real, measurable impact.
At the Centre for Competitiveness (CforC), we support organisations to build Lean Six Sigma capability at every level, from awareness through to expert change leadership. This guide is designed to help you decide which belt is the right fit for you or your team.
Why Belt Selection Matters
Lean Six Sigma is most effective when the right people are trained at the right level and assigned to appropriate projects. Over-training can waste time and budget, while under-training can limit impact and frustrate teams.
Effective belt selection:
Best suited for:
Front-line employees
Supervisors and team members
Organisations beginning their Lean Six Sigma journey
White Belts develop an understanding of Lean Six Sigma principles, language and basic tools. Their role is to support improvement activity, contribute ideas, and participate effectively in projects led by others.
This level is ideal for creating a shared improvement mindset across teams and establishing a common vocabulary for continuous improvement.
Typical outcomes:
Improved problem awareness
Better team engagement
Stronger support for improvement initiatives
Best suited for:
Key team members
Process owners
Individuals involved in improvement or cost reduction projects
Yellow Belts move beyond awareness and begin applying Lean Six Sigma tools in a structured way. They support projects by collecting and analysing data, identifying root causes, and contributing to solutions.
This level is particularly effective for building internal capability and ensuring projects are supported by people closest to the process.
Typical outcomes:
Stronger problem-solving skills
Improved process understanding
Tangible efficiency and quality improvements
Best suited for:
Managers and supervisors
Continuous improvement leads
Individuals responsible for delivering measurable change
Green Belts lead Lean Six Sigma projects within their function or business area. At CforC, Green Belt certification is achieved through the completion of a real workplace-based project, ensuring learning is embedded and delivers value. Green Belts balance day-to-day responsibilities with structured project leadership and data-driven decision-making.
Typical outcomes:
Delivered cost savings or performance improvements
Improved cross-functional collaboration
Strong internal improvement capability
Best suited for:
Senior managers
Operational excellence leaders
Individuals leading complex or cross-functional initiatives
Black Belts are agents of change within the organisation. They lead high-impact projects, mentor Green Belts, and support the strategic deployment of Lean Six Sigma. This level requires strong analytical capability, leadership skills, and the ability to influence across teams and functions.
Typical outcomes:
Enterprise-level improvements
Sustainable performance gains
Embedded culture of continuous improvement
Many organisations benefit most from a blended belt structure, where:
White and Yellow Belts build broad engagement
Green Belts deliver focused improvement projects
Black Belts provide leadership, coaching and strategic alignment
CforC works closely with organisations to align Lean Six Sigma training with business objectives, ensuring capability development translates into real results.
Our Green Belt and Black Belt programmes include a live, in-house improvement project, enabling participants to solve a real business problem while they learn.
A defining feature of CforC’s approach is that projects are based on your own processes, data and challenges. Rather than working with generic or simulated data sets, we work with you to identify a meaningful improvement opportunity using data and problems that participants are already familiar with.
This ensures the training content is highly relevant, immediately applicable, and grounded in operational reality – while delivering improvements that matter to your organisation.
In practice, these projects typically deliver cost savings of at least £10,000 per organisation, often exceeding the investment in training and leaving a lasting capability for continuous improvement.
Marianne