Expanding your manufacturing facility isn’t usually something that becomes a team project with all of your employees engaged. One Cincinnati manufacturer shows that employee engagement with such a project is like building a new facility: it happens one brick at a time.
Agile2016 Recap at the Lean and Agile Learning Network Meetup
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The Building Blocks of Manufacturing Excellence
1. Global Automation and
Manufacturing Summit Webinar
Series
Mick Wilz
Sur-Seal
Director of Enterprise Excellence
“The Building Blocks of Manufacturing Excellence”
2. Some info about who Sur-Seal.
We are experts in sealing materials and applications, and provide design, manufacturing and supply
chain management and integration services to leading OEMs around the world.
We serve four Markets:
• HVAC
• Lighting
• Medical
• Industrial
We are on a Journey to make our facility World Class. This is guided by the values of the organization
and built on a foundation of trust.
3. Mick Wilz, Sur-Seal
• Co-owner and Director of Enterprise Excellence.
• I took over production in 1993. I can remember the day my father
started the business in 1965. almost 50 years ago.
• In 2012 we received the AME award for manufacturing excellence.
• On January 31th 2012 the New York Times told our story in the
business section. The story was about my ability to solve problems
and make knowledge visual and accessible to everyone.
• I am now president for AME Great Lakes Region. Indiana, Ohio and
Michigan.
• I also have a program that I teach around the country. The title is
“ Building an Engaged Team Takes Team Work”
4. Some info about who Mick is. Growing up facing adversity
• As a child I grew up with Dyslexia.
• I took over production in 1993.
• At that point Lean was driven by one of our top customers.
• The way lean was implemented at Sur-Seal in the 1990,s was my way or the highway.
• 10 years later I looked over my shoulders and I had no one following me.
• I needed to reinvent myself, I was living 2 different lives.
• This phase took over 4 years before I could talk about it in public.
5. Employee engagement needs to come from the heart…….
Lessons Learned
• In lean I follow the 3 ps. Product, Process and People. In the 1990s I was missing the people part of it.
• Now the people part is my main focus.
• You need to find a seat on the bus for everyone.
• Engagement needs to come from the Heart.
• With this in-line everyone else takes care of the product & process.
• “People are not afraid of change, they are afraid of uncertainty.”
• As a leader you need to remove the uncertainty.
• One of the many tools that I used was a lego model of our plant.
9. Guiding Principles for Leadership to live by
Is your team playing the same music in harmony together?
1 of 3 People
Be competent in self-awareness
Lead by example
Align everything to the vision, mission and values
Build everything on a foundation of trust
Always remember why you are in business
Hire hard, lead easy Ginger Hardage
Lead people, manage processes
Create a culture where it is ok to be different
Pleasure in the job puts perfection in the work. Aristotle
Respect and appreciation
Master the skill of listening
Be accountable
Teach what right looks like
Remove uncertainty
Listen to your inside voice, it is usually right
Network, surround yourself with great people
Communicate clearly
Educate yourself, be a lifelong learner
Make work meaningful
Celebrate Text: 513.295.4820
10. Guiding Principles for Leadership to live by
Is your team playing the same music in harmony together?
2 of 3 Process
Safety comes first
Teamwork is a must
Gather input from all stakeholders
Include sustainability in the plan
Keep it simple
Lead people, manage processes
Commit to continuous improvement
Eliminate waste, a person is never waste
Change from a push to a pull system
Build a visual workplace
Build quality into all processes
Capture tribal knowledge
Looking for waste needs to become a habit
Eliminate all silos
Facilitate change
Measure progress
Truly understand flow process flow
Cross training is a win, win
Train, Mentor and Coach
Understand true cost
End the blame game
11. Guiding Principles for Leadership to live by
Is your team playing the same music in harmony together?
3 of 3 Product
Coherent vision, strategy, plan and metrics
There is a way to do everything better, find it. (Thomas Edison]
Develop long term relationships built on trust
Strive to understand what is really needed
Listen to the voice of the customer
Seek excellence, create value for the customer
Involve suppliers early on
Understand the true cost
Test fast, fail fast, adjust fast John Powell
Be a leader in the industry not a follower
Pick two for the customer, they cannot have all three
Quick Delivery High Quality Low Price Edward Deming
Meet their delivery requirements
You cannot be everything to everybody
Don’t be afraid to say no
End low bid contracts. Edward Deming
Simulation and rapid prototyping
Build quality and process into the product
Cross-functional product development teams
Exceed their expectations
Strive to make the customer brag about you. Edward Deming
Develop product that is harder to copy
12. • Mission and Values of the Family
• Mission and Values of the organization
• Link everything to the Strategy
• Safety needs to be first
• How to keep it sustainable
• Find a link on the chain for every person
• Find a link on the chain for every process
• Find a link on the chain for all products
• Don’t be afraid to say no
• Lead people manage processes
• Commit to continuous improvement
• Keep your chain straight
• Don’t push or pull it
Keep Your Chain Straight