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Going Lean – Can It Work for Universities? Keith A. Willoughby, Ph.D. Senior Operations Research Specialist Health Quality Council Saskatoon, SK kwilloughby@hqc.sk.ca Denis Caron Provincial Dean of Industrial Training Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science & Technology (SIAST)
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Going Lean – Can It Work for Universities? Keith A. Willoughby, Ph.D. Senior Operations Research Specialist Health Quality Council Saskatoon, SK kwilloughby@hqc.sk.ca Denis Caron Provincial Dean of Industrial Training Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science & Technology (SIAST) Saskatoon, SK caron@sasktel.net
Part I • Lean 101 • History, principles, tools • Success stories • Lessons learned
What we hope to accomplish • Acquaint you with the concepts of Lean • Introduce some of the language • Answer the questions, “What is it? What’s in it for me?”
More information on Lean systems • Womack JP, Jones DT, Roos D. The Machine That Changed the World, 1990. • Womack JP, Jones DT. Lean Thinking, 2003. • Some valuable websites: • www.lean.org (Lean Enterprise Institute) • www.leanUK.org (Lean Enterprise Academy)
Pop Quiz • Who started this whole notion of Lean principles, and when did they do this?
Answer A? • Jim Womack (1990) • 5-year, $5 million study of global vehicle production • International Motor Vehicle Program • Co-authored “The Machine That Changed the World” with Dan Jones and Dan Roos • Coined the term “Lean”
Is it…Answer B? • Taiichi Ohno (1912-1990) • 1950’s: Toyota Production System • Continuous Flow Production • Just-in-Time (JIT) • Eliminate defects • Top management commitment • Employee participation • 1969: Established the Operations Management Consulting Group • “Trainers” commissioned to promote Lean thinking within Toyota and the firms in its supplier group
Or, how about… Answer C? • C.R. Dooley • Helped to develop the “Training Within Industry” program (1940s) • Infiltrated into Japanese industry by the Allied forces after World War II
Could it be…Answer D? • Henry Ford, 1920s • Continuous Flow Assembly • Reduce wasted time • 1913-1914: doubled production with no increase in workforce • 1920-1926: Cycle time from 21 days to 2 days
But maybe it is…Answer E? • Eli Whitney (1700’s) • Quick production of high-quality muskets • Standard interchangeable parts • Minimal product variation • Ordered and integrated workflow
Another choice…Answer F? • The Venetian arsenal • Republic of Venice, early 16th century • Could produce nearly one ship each day • Standardized parts • Production-line basis
What does this show us? • This is not new stuff • So why all the buzz today?
What is “Lean”? • Providing value with less waste • Making common sense common practice
Lean definitions • Providing exactly what the customer needs, safely, when needed, in precisely the right quantity, and without waste • Providing value for the customer • A set of quality improvement tools and philosophy designed to eliminate the sources of waste in a system
What Lean is NOT • Layoffs • Customers = widgets • Making people work faster
Lean principles • 1. What is value from the customer’s perspective? • 2. Understand your process • We’ll say more about this later • 3. Smooth the flow • Eliminate congestion
More principles • 4. Pull • Supplier doesn’t produce until the customer signals a need • Is there smooth communication between process steps? • 5. Pursue perfection • A continual, never-ending journey
Lean tools: A quick survey • Poka-Yokes (Failsafes) • Eliminates or reduces the opportunities for mistakes • Check John Grout's PokaYoke Page on www.mistakeproofing.com
Vehicles • Arrow to indicate location of fuel tanks (driver/ passenger side) • Great for rental vehicles • Gas cap tether does not allow the motorist to drive off without the cap
European streets • Tourists used to right-hand side driving need some help in London • Instructions are printed right on the asphalt
At the airport • If your bag fits in the size-wise unit it will fit in the overhead compartment
Visual control systems • Labels, colour-coding to: • make it easier to find items • quicker ability to detect abnormal from normal • Examples: • Surgical shadowboards • Diagonal stripe along the fronts of binders
The philosophy of 5S • “5S” stands for 5 Japanese words each beginning with the letter “S” • Translated into English as: • Sort, Set, Shine, Standardize, Sustain
Exploring 5S • “A visually-oriented system for organizing the workplace to minimize the waste of time” • “Clears the clouds” • Eliminates the waste of motion/ looking for things • Makes the abnormal visually obvious
Some more on 5S • It is NOT simply cleaning up! • Following 5S principles helps provide the disciplined habits necessary for further phases of Lean implementation
Process mapping • Obtain clearer understanding of how the process currently operates • Helps “learn to see” and “develop eyes for waste” • Redundant processing, unnecessary movement or wait time • Assist with identifying and planning improvements
Lessons learned • Culture, culture, culture • Top-down vision • Front-line enthusiasm • Build your own capacity • The first pass through a process map can identify obvious sources of waste
Lessons learned • Let your data tell the story • There is a difference between a good idea and the right idea • Imbed improvement events within the day-to-day operations of your organization • Start with maintenance or purchasing
Part II • Lean Application in Post-Secondary Institutions
Words of Wisdom • "Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius - and a lot of courage - to move in the opposite direction." • "Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new." Albert Einstein
Strategic Thinking • Old Mind • Develop strategic plans • Operate independently • Lead with authority • Cope with technology • Delegate financial management • Communicate facts and logic • Manage risk • Become an expert • New Mind • Plan, think strategically • Lead with vision & teams • Leverage technology • Develop personal business acumen • Uses metaphors, stories, images • Balance risk and reward • Remain a learner
Strategic sense Get on the Balcony1 Leadership Management 1 Heifetz, R.A & Laurie, D.L. (2001)
Strategic Thinking Model Supporting Objectives “What” Strategic Planning “What and Why” Evaluate Plan in Action “How”
Why Lean? Public sector perspective - Finance stewardship Video Clip
Why Lean? Public sector perspective - Human resources and capacity Video Clip
SIAST’s Approach(How?) • SIAST and division strategic plan • Business case • Survey • Strategic direction • Lean program pilot • Industrial Mechanics Labs and Classrooms
Leaning Industrial Mechanic’s Program“Pursuing Excellence” SIMPLIFY
Leaning Industrial Mechanic’s Program“Pursuing Excellence”
Leaning Industrial Mechanic’s Program“Pursuing Excellence”
Leaning Industrial Mechanic’s Program“Pursuing Excellence”
SIAST - Lessons Learned • Plant the seed early • Find and support champions • Don’t go it alone • Find quick wins • Leverage success • Communicate effectively and frequently • Educate, educate, educate • Remain focused and determined
SIAST - Future Direction • Industrial Division • Expansion of lean practices • Self sufficiency • Education and training (Green belts) • Registration Services • Registration process • Student transcript process • Waitlist management