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Can Contracting Be “Leaned”?. Breakout Session # 205 Tim Ortel, CPCM, Intuitive Surgical Date 15 April 2008 Time 2:10 PM – 3:10 PM. No “Fat” Streamline flow Optimized process Promotes Value Add Reduces Cost Lead time. A philosophy? A process? An end result?
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Can Contracting Be “Leaned”? Breakout Session # 205 Tim Ortel, CPCM, Intuitive Surgical Date 15 April 2008 Time 2:10 PM – 3:10 PM
No “Fat” Streamline flow Optimized process Promotes Value Add Reduces Cost Lead time A philosophy? A process? An end result? Continuous improvement “Good enough is not good enough” What is Lean?
Lean application • Typically in manufacturing • Promotes pull versus push • Integrates people, process, tools to avoid waste • At work in: • Automotive, electronics, medical • Aerospace, construction
Lean in non-production? • Insurance claims • Invoice payments • Order management • Purchase order process • Is there “lean”ed contracting? • Yes!!
Flow charts Value stream maps Pareto charts Failure analysis Cross training Fishbone charts COMMWIP 5 Whys Just In Time Kanban Kaizen/Blitz Force Field Analysis Single Piece Flow 5S Tools that support lean
Why take the lean journey? • Takes care of customers – adds value • Improves enterprise processes • Develops employees, enhances teamwork • Makes improvement a way of life, not a fad • Reduces lead times, costs, variation • Makes processes simple, repeatable, sustainable • Competitors will go lean if you don’t (and are?)
Let’s COMMWIP-Proof the process • Do you want to achieve “lean”ed? • Why? • No more “MUDA” – waste • Build up trust in process • Improve (& simplify) process
What is waste (MUDA) • Why eliminate waste? • Customers don’t want to pay for it • Employees don’t like it • Suppliers don’t understand it • “Any element of processing or distribution that adds no value to the final product (service) – waste only adds cost & time” (& frustration)
Correction Overproduction Motion Material Movement Waiting Inventory Process Overproduction Waiting Transportation Inventory Motion Over processing Defective units COMMWIP – the 7 deadly wastes
Sizing up COMMWIP wasters • How you identify waste • Brainstorming, flow charts, pareto charts • How you document it • Fishbone (Ishikawa), pareto charts • How you fix it • Brainstorm, failure mode analysis • Flow chart, force field analysis
Correction (COMMWIP) • Doing things over again, rework, repeat • Leads to added waiting, motion? • Types of contract waste • Wrong specification • Wrong approvals • Wrong metrics, measures • Wrong process design
Overproduction (COMMWIP) • Building too many • Poor yields, bad forecast, variation • Types of contract wasters • Unnecessary, & too many reports • Excessive copies • Process redundancy • Too many drafts before final • Over-specification
Motion (COMMWIP) • Unnecessary work movements • Extra steps which don’t add value • Multiple repeat steps in process • Contract wasters • Excessive, unnecessary approvals • Extra process steps (reviews, emails) • Excessive meetings (or wrong focus)
Waiting (COMMWIP) • Lots of handoffs in process • Queues, buffers • Reviews, approvals • Waiting due to meetings, decisions signoffs • Unnecessary meeting participation • Lacking a “KISS” perspective
Processing (COMMWIP) • Long process flow • Complex process design • Serial versus concurrent steps • Redundant steps and/or approvals • Extra time to rework, fix • “We’ve always done it this way”
Kaizen 改善 • 改('kai') KAI - “change” • “action to correct” • 善('zen') ZEN - “good”, “for better” • A culture of sustained continuous improvement • Eliminate waste in systems and processes • Begins & ends with people • Involved leadership guidance • Continuously improve: quality, low cost, & delivery • Transforms companies to 'Superior Competitors'
Kaizen – what is this? 改善 • Cross functional improvement team • A project – to solve a problem, improve • Evaluate and measure “as is”, “before” • Brainstorm “could be, should be” • Prototype solutions, measure “after” • Cross train, then implement
Kaizen sequence of events • Define problem • Define root cause: (fishbone) • Research root cause: (brainstorm, paretos) • Define “as is” process – draw it: (flow chart) • Brainstorm fixes, improvements (force field) • Structure “could be” process – draw it (flow chart) • Prototype a “should be” process – cross training • Change process (use force field analysis) • Measure before & after – define metrics!!!
The PDCA cycle PLAN ACT/ADJUST DO CHECK
From “muda” to “shinrai” 信頼 Shinrai “trust” 価値 Kachi “value” 無駄 Muda “waste”
Buying a robotics surgery system Legal Review Sales Contract Customer Need Ship Install Service Build Make To Stock
Why “lean”ed • Lean is a tool: leverages process, projects • COMMWIP-proofing enhances lean • Kaizen: a project tool (within lean) • “Good enough is not good enough” • It’s not just enough to win – • Better yourself in the process also!
Checking out “lean”ed contracting • “Applying Lean Thinking to Govt Contracting” • Dr. Rose M. Smith (On Line Powerpoint) • Air Force Smart Operations 21 (AFSO21) • http://www.newsblaze.com/story • DAU – Lean Enterprise Model • http://www.dau.mil/educept • 754th Electronics Systems Group • http://integrator.hanscom/af.mil/2007
You can “lean” your contracts • Use kaizen (“KISS”) to simplify, optimize • Yet comply with legal policy/guidelines • FAR, State, Local, Sarbanes Oxley • When processes are “discretionary” • “Think out of the box” • “Draw outside of lines” • No more “That’s the way we always have..”
Remember • Process should be “value add” • Process should serve customers • Do users trust the process? • Be a change agent (vs. an observer) • Think from a “clean” whiteboard • Keep a Plan, Do, Check, Adjust focus
Closing • Questions? • Tim Ortel, CPCM, CFCM, CPIM • tlortel@yahoo.com • Thank you!