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Going Lean An Introduction to Lean Principles
Purpose Introduce Lean Manufacturing Define waste and value Communicate the types of waste Introduce basic “lean tools” Agree on a path forward
What is Lean Manufacturing? The relentless identification and elimination of waste (non-value added activities and resources) that get in the way of providing customers exactly what they need when they need it Optimizing the flow of value in our Value Stream to match customer demand
How Will Lean Help Us? Reduce Lead Time to our customers by eliminating waste from our system See things differently than we do today Optimally utilize resources while meeting our customer’s needs   Enhance our process flow Improve quality and lower costs
What is Waste? Consuming more resources than are necessary to produce the goods, or service, that the customer wants Pure Waste : Actions that could be stopped without effecting the customer  Incidental Waste : Actions that need to be done based on how the current system operates but do not add value
 
Waste – The Simple Part … Being Able to  See  IT! The Real Challenge … Knowing  How  to Properly Remove IT!
Types of Waste We’d See In Our Cell Over Production Inventory Waiting Transportation Motion Over Processing Quality / Defects People’s Skills
Overproduction  - Supplying the process with more than is needed to meet order requirements, sooner and faster than it is needed, causes almost all other types of waste Inventory   – Raw materials, work-in-progress, finished goods; extra inventory is used to hide other wastes
Inventory Hides Waste Sea of Inventory Long  Transportation Communication Problems Machine Downtime Employee Availability Poor  Scheduling Quality Problems Line Imbalance Long Setups Supplier issues House Keeping Employee Availability Finished Goods Raw Materials
Reducing Inventory Uncovers Opportunities to Improve Opportunities Converted into Cash!
Walking without working; searching for tools, materials or information; reaching, bending or unnecessary motion due to poor housekeeping or workplace layout Motion Double or triple handling, moving in and out of storage areas and warehouses, poor layouts, poor housekeeping Transportation Watching machines run or cycle, waiting for parts, instructions, approval, information, maintenance or decisions Waiting
A source of labor only, not seen as true process experts; do not involve in finding solutions People’s Skills Defective or scrap materials,  OOS control processes, low yield, incorrect schedules, engineering documents or information Defects Repair or rework steps, extra setup steps, over-specification of the process, extra processing steps Process
5 Lean Principles make up the Lean Strategy for Our Cell Specify value Map the flow of value Make value flow Pull from the customer Seek perfection
1. Specify Value for Our Customer(s) Providing the  right  product, at the  right  time, in the  right  quantity, at the  right  quality, at the  right  price, in the  right  place in accordance to the customers requirements Usually value added steps lead to a transformation of the material from one form to another which gets the product closer to the customer’s specifications
A value stream is   all of the value-adding activity  AND  all of the non-value adding activity (pure waste and incidental waste) required to provide a product/service to a customer 2. Map the Flow of Value in Our Cell Process A Process B Process C Raw Material Customer Finished Product Value Stream
 
3. Make Value Flow in Our Cell Continuous Flow  - Make One  - Move One Batch Processing How long to make a pack of 10 units? How long to make a pack of 10 units?
4. Establish Pull from Our Cell’s Customer(s) Okay! One more please! Customer Supplier
5. Seek Perfection in Our Cell PDCA
Lean Tools
Hoshin Plan A planning tool that helps us identify the key focus points and strategies we will use to steer us towards our vision. Enables everyone to ‘see’ where we’re going and our plans to get there Build plan and strategies as a team Shared responsibility for getting results Vision Key Result Areas Key Result Measures Key Strategies
5S Focuses on effective workplace organization and standardization it allows us to easily spot variation from standard operating conditions. Cleaner, safer work environment Organized, user friendly workstations Open up space and reduce clutter
Total Productive Maintenance Shifts basic maintenance work to operators, freeing up maintenance personnel to work on planned maintenance or equipment improvements.  Workers have ownership of the machine & process Maximize equipment effectiveness Increase employee skill set Reduced manufacturing costs through continuous monitoring Improve Reliability & Operability Defect Detection & Removal Defect Prevention Defect Awareness Improved Equipment Effectiveness Maintenance Skills Development Autonomous Maintenance Planned Maintenance Maintenance Reliability
Visual Factory Visual elements on the production floor allow everyone to “know the score” and they make out of standard situations immediately obvious.  Enables everyone to ‘see’ how we’re performing Helps highlight problems, or variances from standard Encourages employee involvement and open discussions
Workforce Flexibility The ability of the workforce to “flex” to other jobs as demand fluctuates within the system, and the efforts the organization undertakes to ensure this occurs. Improve worker skill set  Maximize organizational flexibility Focused training and development plans Allow the ability to flex to our customer’s demands
Standardized Work A step-by-step description of work activity used every time by everyone to safely complete a task based on best known practices. Operators involved in determining best practices Minimizes and highlights process variability Everyone learns best practice 1 3 2 4 5 6 Proper PPE must be worn at all times. Standard Work Sheet
Kanban A visual system that easily communicates the need for parts to be either replenished or consumed. Designed to improve material flow and control inventory levels. Workers produce product based on actual usage Minimizes inventory by tying production to consumption X X X (make one move one)
Quick Changeover Changeover is defined as the time elapsed between when the  last good piece  of product A comes off and the  first good piece  of  product B starts. Improve repeatability through standardized processes Improved flow of material Reduction in inventory Standardize expectations
Zero Defect Quality The principle that defects are prevented by controlling the performance of a process so that it  cannot  produce defects through mistake proofing and failsafe methods. Improved quality and customer satisfaction Solutions at the source – employees aid in problem solving and in developing   creative, more effective corrective actions
Kaizen A system involving every employee that is based on making little changes on a regular basis, anywhere changes can be made. Continuous small improvements Changes are implemented quickly Everyone gets involved
Recap
Value Defined Value-Added Activities Transforms or shapes material or information Customer wants it Done right the first time Incidental Waste No value created but required by current technology No value created but required by current thinking No value created but required by process limitations No value created but required by current process  Pure Waste Consume resources but creates no value for the customer Could be stopped and it would be invisible to the customer
Lean Emphasis Resource distribution Opportunity for improvement by reducing waste  and creating additional value Value Waste Initial Process Value Waste General Process Reduction Waste and Value  Both Decrease Waste Only  Reduction Value Waste Target & Reduce Waste  Maintain Value Value Maintained Resources Decrease Value Creation Value Waste Apply Resources  to Create More Value Value Increased Resources Focused
How Do We Succeed with Lean? As a team – open minded, supportive Understand the concepts and accept all aspects of the lean process, including those that may cause undesirable effect in the short term Aligned focus from the top to the bottom Effectively use lean methodologies Carefully plan implementation to remove waste Allocate the proper resources Becoming truly lean is a journey and will not be made without some discomfort
Expected Lean Results Costs Defects (99%) Inventory (10 fold) Lead Time (90%) Machine Downtime Space (50%) Capacity   Customer Responsiveness Efficiency Employee Satisfaction Flexibility – Demand Flux
Resources Internally John Schwendy, Darrell Bryant, Dennis Dempsey and Harold Philbrick Lewis salary personnel trained Externally CITEC – training more people in 2008 Jim Myers – consulting throughout process
Attitude is Critical “ If you think you can or you think you can’t. You’re Right.”   Henry Ford

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Hourly Lean Introduction

  • 1. Going Lean An Introduction to Lean Principles
  • 2. Purpose Introduce Lean Manufacturing Define waste and value Communicate the types of waste Introduce basic “lean tools” Agree on a path forward
  • 3. What is Lean Manufacturing? The relentless identification and elimination of waste (non-value added activities and resources) that get in the way of providing customers exactly what they need when they need it Optimizing the flow of value in our Value Stream to match customer demand
  • 4. How Will Lean Help Us? Reduce Lead Time to our customers by eliminating waste from our system See things differently than we do today Optimally utilize resources while meeting our customer’s needs Enhance our process flow Improve quality and lower costs
  • 5. What is Waste? Consuming more resources than are necessary to produce the goods, or service, that the customer wants Pure Waste : Actions that could be stopped without effecting the customer Incidental Waste : Actions that need to be done based on how the current system operates but do not add value
  • 6.  
  • 7. Waste – The Simple Part … Being Able to See IT! The Real Challenge … Knowing How to Properly Remove IT!
  • 8. Types of Waste We’d See In Our Cell Over Production Inventory Waiting Transportation Motion Over Processing Quality / Defects People’s Skills
  • 9. Overproduction - Supplying the process with more than is needed to meet order requirements, sooner and faster than it is needed, causes almost all other types of waste Inventory – Raw materials, work-in-progress, finished goods; extra inventory is used to hide other wastes
  • 10. Inventory Hides Waste Sea of Inventory Long Transportation Communication Problems Machine Downtime Employee Availability Poor Scheduling Quality Problems Line Imbalance Long Setups Supplier issues House Keeping Employee Availability Finished Goods Raw Materials
  • 11. Reducing Inventory Uncovers Opportunities to Improve Opportunities Converted into Cash!
  • 12. Walking without working; searching for tools, materials or information; reaching, bending or unnecessary motion due to poor housekeeping or workplace layout Motion Double or triple handling, moving in and out of storage areas and warehouses, poor layouts, poor housekeeping Transportation Watching machines run or cycle, waiting for parts, instructions, approval, information, maintenance or decisions Waiting
  • 13. A source of labor only, not seen as true process experts; do not involve in finding solutions People’s Skills Defective or scrap materials, OOS control processes, low yield, incorrect schedules, engineering documents or information Defects Repair or rework steps, extra setup steps, over-specification of the process, extra processing steps Process
  • 14. 5 Lean Principles make up the Lean Strategy for Our Cell Specify value Map the flow of value Make value flow Pull from the customer Seek perfection
  • 15. 1. Specify Value for Our Customer(s) Providing the right product, at the right time, in the right quantity, at the right quality, at the right price, in the right place in accordance to the customers requirements Usually value added steps lead to a transformation of the material from one form to another which gets the product closer to the customer’s specifications
  • 16. A value stream is all of the value-adding activity AND all of the non-value adding activity (pure waste and incidental waste) required to provide a product/service to a customer 2. Map the Flow of Value in Our Cell Process A Process B Process C Raw Material Customer Finished Product Value Stream
  • 17.  
  • 18. 3. Make Value Flow in Our Cell Continuous Flow - Make One - Move One Batch Processing How long to make a pack of 10 units? How long to make a pack of 10 units?
  • 19. 4. Establish Pull from Our Cell’s Customer(s) Okay! One more please! Customer Supplier
  • 20. 5. Seek Perfection in Our Cell PDCA
  • 22. Hoshin Plan A planning tool that helps us identify the key focus points and strategies we will use to steer us towards our vision. Enables everyone to ‘see’ where we’re going and our plans to get there Build plan and strategies as a team Shared responsibility for getting results Vision Key Result Areas Key Result Measures Key Strategies
  • 23. 5S Focuses on effective workplace organization and standardization it allows us to easily spot variation from standard operating conditions. Cleaner, safer work environment Organized, user friendly workstations Open up space and reduce clutter
  • 24. Total Productive Maintenance Shifts basic maintenance work to operators, freeing up maintenance personnel to work on planned maintenance or equipment improvements. Workers have ownership of the machine & process Maximize equipment effectiveness Increase employee skill set Reduced manufacturing costs through continuous monitoring Improve Reliability & Operability Defect Detection & Removal Defect Prevention Defect Awareness Improved Equipment Effectiveness Maintenance Skills Development Autonomous Maintenance Planned Maintenance Maintenance Reliability
  • 25. Visual Factory Visual elements on the production floor allow everyone to “know the score” and they make out of standard situations immediately obvious. Enables everyone to ‘see’ how we’re performing Helps highlight problems, or variances from standard Encourages employee involvement and open discussions
  • 26. Workforce Flexibility The ability of the workforce to “flex” to other jobs as demand fluctuates within the system, and the efforts the organization undertakes to ensure this occurs. Improve worker skill set Maximize organizational flexibility Focused training and development plans Allow the ability to flex to our customer’s demands
  • 27. Standardized Work A step-by-step description of work activity used every time by everyone to safely complete a task based on best known practices. Operators involved in determining best practices Minimizes and highlights process variability Everyone learns best practice 1 3 2 4 5 6 Proper PPE must be worn at all times. Standard Work Sheet
  • 28. Kanban A visual system that easily communicates the need for parts to be either replenished or consumed. Designed to improve material flow and control inventory levels. Workers produce product based on actual usage Minimizes inventory by tying production to consumption X X X (make one move one)
  • 29. Quick Changeover Changeover is defined as the time elapsed between when the last good piece of product A comes off and the first good piece of product B starts. Improve repeatability through standardized processes Improved flow of material Reduction in inventory Standardize expectations
  • 30. Zero Defect Quality The principle that defects are prevented by controlling the performance of a process so that it cannot produce defects through mistake proofing and failsafe methods. Improved quality and customer satisfaction Solutions at the source – employees aid in problem solving and in developing creative, more effective corrective actions
  • 31. Kaizen A system involving every employee that is based on making little changes on a regular basis, anywhere changes can be made. Continuous small improvements Changes are implemented quickly Everyone gets involved
  • 32. Recap
  • 33. Value Defined Value-Added Activities Transforms or shapes material or information Customer wants it Done right the first time Incidental Waste No value created but required by current technology No value created but required by current thinking No value created but required by process limitations No value created but required by current process Pure Waste Consume resources but creates no value for the customer Could be stopped and it would be invisible to the customer
  • 34. Lean Emphasis Resource distribution Opportunity for improvement by reducing waste and creating additional value Value Waste Initial Process Value Waste General Process Reduction Waste and Value Both Decrease Waste Only Reduction Value Waste Target & Reduce Waste Maintain Value Value Maintained Resources Decrease Value Creation Value Waste Apply Resources to Create More Value Value Increased Resources Focused
  • 35. How Do We Succeed with Lean? As a team – open minded, supportive Understand the concepts and accept all aspects of the lean process, including those that may cause undesirable effect in the short term Aligned focus from the top to the bottom Effectively use lean methodologies Carefully plan implementation to remove waste Allocate the proper resources Becoming truly lean is a journey and will not be made without some discomfort
  • 36. Expected Lean Results Costs Defects (99%) Inventory (10 fold) Lead Time (90%) Machine Downtime Space (50%) Capacity Customer Responsiveness Efficiency Employee Satisfaction Flexibility – Demand Flux
  • 37. Resources Internally John Schwendy, Darrell Bryant, Dennis Dempsey and Harold Philbrick Lewis salary personnel trained Externally CITEC – training more people in 2008 Jim Myers – consulting throughout process
  • 38. Attitude is Critical “ If you think you can or you think you can’t. You’re Right.” Henry Ford