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1. Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive
3. Competitiveness Challenges Rapidly advancing technology
Customer demands faster, better, cheaper
Offshore competition from low wage countries
Chinas average wages are:
25% of Mexicos
10% of Hong Kong & Taiwans
3% of U.S.
4. How Will Firms Compete? Its all about
... Innovation
Productivity
Speed
5. 2 Key Tools for Competitiveness
Lean Manufacturing / Lean Office
Six Sigma
6. KMAC Mission: Increase the competitiveness of Kentucky manufacturers
Private, not-for-profit corporation
Statewide operations
Industry-driven Board of Directors
Kentucky affiliate of the national Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP) program
7. Productivity Improvement Lean Manufacturing / Lean for the Office
Facilities Planning & Layout
Process Improvement
Problem Solving Training
Employee Development
Team Building & Team Leader Development
8. Quality Improvement Quality Systems
ISO and QS/TS Standards
Six Sigma
Statistical Process Control
Poka-Yoke / Error Proofing
9. Product Improvement New Product Development
Accelerate to Market for Small & Medium Enterprises (ATOM-SME)
Value Engineering / Design for Manufacturability
10. Business Improvement Strategic Planning
Meeting Facilitation
Performance Measurement
Financial Planning
11. Benefits Expertise
Staff of seasoned manufacturing professionals
Results
Proven track record will all types of industry
A national leader among MEP Centers for delivering quantifiable, bottom-line impacts to clients
Value
Clients realize significant returns on their investments in KMAC services
12. FY06 Client-Reported Results Increased Sales: $21 Million
Retained Sales: $12 Million
Annual Cost
Savings: $4.8 Million
New Investment: $27 Million
13. Lean Manufacturing Lean Office
14. What is Lean?
15. Defining Value-Added Activities
16. Lean = Eliminating the Wastes
17. Lean Tools
18. Value Stream Mapping Visually document current material & information flow
Identify non value-added activities
Quantify non value-added lead time
Create an ideal future state
Eliminate wastes & simplify processes
Results in development of a Lean Implementation Action Plan
Prioritized improvement projects
Determines Lean Tools to be applied
19. 5S System Designed to improve workplace organization and standardization
20. Visual Workplace Simple signals providing an immediate understanding of a situation or condition
Kanban cards
Color-coded dies, tools, pallets
21. Plant Layout
22. Standardized Work Tasks organized in the best known sequence
Most effective combination of:
People
Materials
Methods
Machines
23. Batch Reduction
The best batch size is:
ONE PIECE FLOW
Make One . . . Move One!
24. Teams More flexible
Greater productivity & use of resources
Collaborative & cross-functional
More creative & innovative
25. Quality at the Source Quality built
Operators inspect
Necessary equipment
Established standards
Process documentation
26. Point of Use Storage Materials are stored where used
Simplifies physical inventory tracking, storage, and handling
27. Quick Changeover Changing over a process to produce a different product in the most efficient manner
28. Pull/Kanban Push System
Production based on forecasts or schedules
Pull/Kanban System
Production based on actual demand using Kanbans to signal replenishment
29. Cellular Flow Linking of manual and machine operations into the most efficient combination of resources
Flexible layout
Simplify flows
Minimize materials handling
Make use of people
30. Total Productive Maintenance Systematic approach to the elimination of equipment downtime as a waste factor
Designed to maximize the productivity of equipment for Its entire life
31. Going Lean Training in Lean tools
Using Lean tools in improvement events
Kaizen Events
Organizational / Cultural changes
Move toward team environment
Defined problem-solving approach
Performance metrics that support Lean
32. Improvements Achieved with Lean
33. Six Sigma
34. Definition of Six Sigma
Methodology
for disciplined
quality improvement
35. History of Six Sigma Originated at Motorola in the early 1980s
Process modified by others
Implemented by IBM & Allied Signal
Adopted by General Electric in 1995
Broadly deployed
By 1998, GE claimed $750 million in net benefits
36. Goal of Six Sigma Optimize process capability by identifying and minimizing variation
Virtual elimination of all defects
No more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities (DPMO)
99.9996% acceptable
37. Cost of Poor Quality Scrap/Rework
Materials, labor costs, disposition costs
Warranty Costs
Customer credits, return/restocking costs, penalties
Lost Sales
Lost revenues, cost of gaining new customers
38. Competitive Performance
39. Benefits of Improved Quality Bottom-line cost savings
Greater customer satisfaction
Increase in throughput
Reduction in waste and rework
Improvement in process capability
40. Six Sigma Core Philosophies Values defect-prevention over defect-detection
Emphasizes reducing variation in processes
Tackles root causes of poor performance
Is customer-focused by driving improvement in areas most important to your customers
41. Six Sigma Characteristics Defined, problem-solving approach
Data-driven
Project-based
Commitment and support from the top level
42. Problem-Solving Approach Uses a defined approach (DMAIC)
Define the project
Measure the baseline process capability
Analyze when, where and how often defects occur
Improve process capability to reach a Six Sigma level
Control the process to maintain the gain
43. Data-Driven Based on data rather than perception
Uses statistical tools during the DMAIC process
Calls for training in statistical thinking for many; advanced statistics and project management for some
44. Project-Based Project selection is critical
Should advance organizations strategic initiatives
Have impact on a Critical to Quality (CTQ) characteristic
Should have bottom-line financial impact
Begin and end with performance measure
45. Top Level Leadership Requires leadership, commitment and active support from top level management
Leaders should use Six Sigma to drive strategic improvement
Six Sigma projects should support strategic goals
46. Six Sigma The Players The Champion
Black Belt
Green Belt
Quality Process Analyst
47. KMACs Approach to Six Sigma Developed specifically for small- and mid-sized manufacturers
Affordable
Flexible
Focuses on implementation of Six Sigma not just training
Emphasizes bottom-line results
48. Two Part Approach On-Site Deployment Planning & Mentoring
Helps the company gain the most benefit from implementing Six Sigma
Online Six Sigma Training
Provides an affordable way to train Black Belts, Green Belts, and Quality Process Analysts
49. Lean and Six Sigma Two powerful tools to help a company improve:
Quality
Productivity
Bottom-line results
50. Lean & Six Sigma Together Use Lean to:
Reduce or eliminate non-value-added activities
Use Six Sigma to:
Improve value-added activities
Solve complex problems uncovered by Lean or those requiring advanced analysis