Lean Transformation A Journey
Lean Transformation A Journey
Lean Transformation A Journey
A Journey
Anand Subramaniam
Origins of Lean
Lean concepts evolved from the JIT philosophy
pioneered in Japan by Toyota and embodied in
their Toyota Production System (TPS)
The emphasis of JIT is the elimination of waste
throughout the supply chain
In the 1990's companies adopted the term lean
in place of JIT
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Lean Principles
Control
Measure
Specify value in the eyes of the
customer
Identify the value stream and
eliminate the waste
Make value flow at the pull of the
customer
Involve and empower employees
(there is no better source of insight
than the employees who are
performing the work)
Continuously improve (kaizen) in
pursuit of perfection
Improve
Analyse
Note..
It is a journey / endurance race for continuous learning and improving top &
bottom line
Challenges
Viewed as technical transformation (not cultural
transformation)
Looked upon as One-size-fits-all approach
Lack of commitment and understanding of effort required by
C Level and All Levels
Most organisations never get deep enough into the lean
process to achieve true success
Focus on departments rather than value streams
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Internal Challenges
Gap between enterprise resource
planning (ERP) and factory floor
Incompatible and Inconsistent systems
Lack of timely information
to make informed decisions
Lack of strategy to unify
information across manufacturing
Lack of funds and/or
lack of perceived value
Lean Initiative
Optimise performance at
Individual plants and factories
Drive standards and consistency
Across Global manufacturing networks
Improve Sales and Operations
Planning Processes
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Process / Checklist
Enterprise Level Roadmap
How do I transform my
enterprise to lean?
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Warehouse
Sales &
Marketing
Certified
Suppliers
Factory
Warehouse
Human
Resources
Accounting
Engineering
Information
Technology
Customer
Service
Customers
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Focus on the
Value Stream
Initial Lean Vision
Environmental
Corrective
Action Indicators
Decision to pursue
Enterprise Transformation
Enterprise
Strategic
Planning
Lean Impact
Focus on Continuous
Improvement
Outcomes on
Enterprise
Metrics
Implement Lean
Initiatives
Lean
Transformation
Framework
Create & Refine
Transformation Plan
Enterprise
Level
Transformation
Plan
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Phase V: Excel
business renewal
strategy re-vision
vision deployment
implementation/adherence
strategy re-vision
Create mission;
establish values
Mission
Statement
Create leadership
structures
Values
Statement
Envision
the future
RelationShip Map
Organigraph
Play catchball
with deployment
teams
Target/
Means
Analysis
P/O
Matrices
Deployment
Plans
Vision
Statement
Use reliable,
scientific methods
at all levels
Discover/correct
performance
variances
CEDAC
JIT
TPM
CE
5 Minute
Meetings
Weekly
Meetings
Re-vision your
strategy -- again
business renewal
Renew your
business in
real time
Monthly
Meetings
Segment
the market
Define leadership
requirements
Study
Missions
Market
Studies
Define policies,
objectives, targets
and budgets
Play catchball
with action teams
P/O
Matrices
Product/
Market
Matrix
Communicate!
Communicate!
Communicate!
Kickoff
Promotion
Target/
Means
Analysis
P/O
Matrices
Focus
Team
Charter
Technology
Roadmaps
Corporate
Diagnosis
Development
Plan
Target/
means
Analysis
Action
Plans
Finalise policies
and budgets
Plan
Summary
Perform corporate
diagnosis with
top Champions
Assess/analyse
performance
Capture learning
and make it
replicable
Study
Missions
Creative
Thinking
Bottom up
Planning
Scan the
environment
P/O
Matrix
Progress
Tables
Site Visits
CEDAC
CEDAC
Newsletter
Use advanced
planning methods
Strategic
Scenarios
Game
Theoretic
Models
Celebrate
Success!
Website
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Warehouse
Sales &
Marketing
Certified
Suppliers
Factory
Warehouse
Human
Resources
Accounting
Engineering
Information
Technology
Customer
Service
Customers
What
What
A lean
vision
A lean vision
Why
Why lean
Communicate
Communicate
lean
enterprise-wide
enterprise-wide
Who
Who Leader
The Enterprise
The Enterprise Leader
When
When
First
step
First step
How
Learn fromHow
successful
Learn
from successful
lean
implementations
lean implementations
Where
Where
Enterprise-wide
Enterprise-wide
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Process
Strategic Alignment
Top Management support & commitment
Sense of Urgency and prorities
Stakeholder Involvement
Organisational Structure
Goals and Objectives
Transformation Plan
Monitoring and Nurturing
Checklist
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What
What
AAlean
leanvision
vision
Why
Why
Communicate
Communicatelean
lean
enterprise-wide
enterprise-wide
Who
Who
The
Enterprise
The EnterpriseLeader
Leader
When
When
First
Firststep
step
How
How
Learn
from
Learn fromsuccessful
successful
lean
implementations
lean implementations
Where
Where
Enterprise-wide
Enterprise-wide
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Level
Baseline
0
Beginner
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Clearout and Classify - Clearing items no longer required : Tagging items that may be required and storing away from workplace
Configure - A place for everything & everything in its place
Clean and check - Identify cleaning zones, establish cleaning routines
Conformity - Roll out across the organisation
Culture and practice- Monitor process adherence & continually validate
Checklist
Sort
Standardise
Sustain
No methods or
procedures documented.
No routine
review/correction of
unsafe conditions.
Occasional, unscheduled
5S activity.
Methods of work
documented but not
consistently used.
5S activities conducted
on regular basis.
5S assessment
conducted occasionally
and results posted.
Needed /un-needed
items separated, unneeded tagged.
Visual
3
Preventive
5
Shine
Placement of items
causes unsafe
conditions.
Basic
2
Systematic
4
Simplify
5S assessment
conducted on a regular
basis and recurring
problems are identified.
Root causes of problems
revealed by 5S
assessment are
identified and eliminated.
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Cellular/Flow
POUS
Quick Changeover
Batch Reduction
Visual
Teams
Plant Layout
Performance Measurement
POUS point of use storage
TPM
Value
Stream
Mapping
Source: Techhelp
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Waste Elimination
Typical Value Stream Ratio
Value-Added (VA) to Non-Value-Added Activity (NVA)
3%
VA
97% NVA
Most Process Improvement Teams Attack this . .
.
97% NVA
. .and Ignore this
. . . Achieve this
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Reference - Lean
www.lean.org
www.productivityinc.com
www.productivitypress.com
www.leanadvisors.com
Building the Lean Machine, Advanced Manufacturing, January 2000.
Fiore, Clifford, Accelerated Product Development: Combining Lean and Six Sigma for
Peak Performance, Productivity Press, NY, NY, 2005.
Hamilton, Bruce, Toast Kaizen, An Introduction to Continuous Improvement & Lean
Principles, Greater Boston Manufacturing Partnership, University of Massachusetts,
Boston, MA, 2005 (DVD).
Insights On Implementation-Improved Flow: Collected Practices and Cases, Ralph
Bernstein, Editor, Productivity Press, 2006.
Jacobs, Robert F. and Chase, Richard B., Operations and Supply Management: The
Core, McGraw-Hill/Irwin, NY, NY, 2008.
Nahmias, Steven, Production & Operations Analysis, 5th Edition, McGraw-Hill/Irwin, NY,
NY, 2005.
Nave, Dave, How to Compare Six Sigma, Lean, and the Theory of Constraints,
Quality Progress, March 2002, pgs 73 78.
Thinking Beyond Lean - How Multi-Project Management is Transforming Product
Development at Toyota and Other Companies (Cusumano, M. A. & Nobeoka, K. 1998)
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Good Luck
http://www.linkedin.com/in/anandsubramaniam
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