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Workshop A Performance Boosting Tools. Reality Check: Are you a Lean, Mean Manufacturing Machine ?. The Matrix: Performance Measurement System. Producing Profitability through Lean Manufacturing. What is Lean Manufacturing ? Why should I adopt Lean Manufacturing ?
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Workshop APerformance Boosting Tools Reality Check: Are you a Lean, Mean Manufacturing Machine ? The Matrix: Performance Measurement System
Producing Profitability through Lean Manufacturing • What is Lean Manufacturing ? • Why should I adopt Lean Manufacturing ? • How can I apply Lean Manufacturing ? TPM 5s Value-added SU Kaizan Flow Bus Info Six Sigma
What is Lean Manufacturing? • A long-term philosophy to propel a box plant to higher profitability • A business strategy that focuses on rapid continuous low-cost improvement in processes and productivity • A tactical plan that integrates several tools into a complete package • A relentless attack on waste using a set of tried and true tools and techniques
Why adopt Lean Principals ? • Increase capacity • Reduce inventories • Reduce Cycle Times / Lead times • Lower space/facility requirements • Lower overall costs • Improve employee moral through increased involvement • Increase sales through focus on customer and value-added activities
Where did Lean Manufacturing come from? Lean Techniques are Not New • James Womack & Daniel Jones • The Machine That Changed the World (1990) • Lean Thinking (1996) • Toyota Production System (1950’s – 1970’s) • JIT / Kanban / SU Reduction / SOP / 5s / Flow • Motorola (1986-1988) • Six Sigma / Variation Reduction / Process Capability
Major Concepts • Waste Seven types • Overproduction • Waiting • Material Movement • Excess Inventory • Excess Motion • Defects • Unnecessary Processing / Converting • Value Those things the customer wants and is willing to pay for. • Value Stream All activities required to design, order, produce and deliver a product or service.
Goal of Lean Manufacturing Focusing on the value stream, identify those things that create value vs. those that do not and relentlessly attacking waste.
Major Tools • Value Stream Analysis • Identify Value-added vs. non-value added activities • Six Kaizan Events • 5s Housekeeping • Flow • Set-up reduction • TPM • Defect/Variation Reduction • Business Processes/Information
Value Stream Mapping • Identifying Value Added vs. Non-value added Activities • Product families = items/orders with a common process or machine routing • Target each product family for improvement efforts
Kaizen Events • Short burst of intense activity and effort (3-5 days) • Biased toward action over analysis • Consist of multi-functional team assembled to achieve a specific goal or solve a specific problem • Focused on improving the value stream and achieving flow • Managed with daily reviews to resolution • Goal driven – Solving Problems and eliminating waste
Kaizen Event # 1 • 5s+1 Housekeeping • Sort • Set in order • Shine • Standardize • Sustain • +1 = Safety
Kaizen Event # 2 • Flow • material, people and activities • Macro Level and machine/dept level • Lean Tools: • Spaghetti Diagram • Flow Charts
Kaizen Event # 3 • Set-up Reduction • Lean Tools: • “Pit Stop” Set-up mentality • Video Tape and Set-up Analysis • Internal vs. External SU activities
Kaizen Event # 4 • TPM = Total Productive Maintenance • Goal is to minimize downtime & maintain capability of equipment • Lean Tools: • Develop Daily Operator PM and Maintenance PM • Develop equipment critical spare parts list • 5s Program contributes toward TPM
Kaizen Event # 5 • Defect / Variation Reduction • Six Sigma Tools • Pareto Charts • Histograms • Process Mapping (KPIV, KPOV) • Cause & Effect Analysis • FMEA • Capability Analysis
Kaizen Event # 6 • Business Process / Information Flow • Design Process • Quotation • Order Entry • Manufacture Order • Shipping Order • Customer Feedback • Accounting / Administration
Keys to Successful Lean Manufacturing • Education and Communication • Employee Involvement & empowerment • Create a culture tolerant of experimentation - allow people to successfully make mistakes • Break the paradigm that Inventory is an Asset • Incorporate Lean concepts into you culture and ongoing strategic plan – not a “project”