Lean Presentation
Lean Presentation
Lean Presentation
Manufacturing
Agenda
Background
Toyota Production System
Key Lean Techniques
Advantages and Disadvantages
People and Customers
Economics
Changes in Lean
Current Lean Practices
Case Studies
Definition
LEAN MANUFACTURING – A way to eliminate
waste and improve efficiency in a manufacturing
environment
Lean focuses on flow, the value stream and
eliminating muda, the Japanese word for waste
Lean manufacturing is the production of goods using
less of everything compared to traditional mass
production: less waste, human effort, manufacturing
space, investment in tools, inventory, and engineering
time to develop a new product
Lean and Just-in-Time
Lean was generated from the Just-in-time
(JIT) philosophy of continuous and forced
problem solving
Just-in-time is supplying customers with
exactly what they want when they want it
With JIT, supplies and components are
“pulled” through a system to arrive where
they are needed when they are needed
What is Waste?
Waste is anything that
happens to a product
that does not add value
from the customer’s
perspective
Products being stored,
inspected or delayed,
products waiting in
queues, and defective
products do not add
value
Seven Wastes
Overproduction – producing more than the customer
orders or producing early. Inventory of any kind is
usually waste.
Queues – idle time, storage, and waiting are wastes
Transportation – moving material between plants,
between work centers, and handling more than once is
waste
Inventory – unnecessary raw material, work-in-process
(WIP), finished goods, and excess operating supplies
Motion – movement of equipment or people
Overprocessing – work performed on product that adds
no value
Defective product – returns, warranty claims, rework
and scrap
Thinking Lean
Specify value
can only be defined by the ultimate customer
Identify the value stream
exposes the enormous amounts of waste
Create flow
reduce batch size and WIP
Let the customer pull product through the value
stream
make only what the customer has ordered
Seek perfection
continuously improve quality and eliminate
waste
From Lean Thinking by Womack and Jones
Benefits
Lean provides tangible benefits
Reduces costs not just selling price
Reduces delivery time, cycle time, set-up time
Eliminates waste
Seeks continuous improvement
Improves quality
Improves customer ratings and perceptions
Increases overall customer satisfaction
Improves employee involvement, morale,
and company culture
Helps “transform” manufacturers
Barriers to Lean
Implementing Lean Can Be Difficult
Because it is Counterintuitive from a
Traditional Paradigm:
Buying multiple small machines rather than one
big machine that offers economies of scale.
Shutting down equipment when maximum
inventory levels are reached rather than running
flat out.
Using standards to continuously improve.
There is no step-by-step cook book
There are some basic steps but the how-to
varies from organization to organization
Requires an assessment of the company in
order to map out the strategy
Implementing Lean
Gain top Management “Buy In” and Support
Perform overall company assessment tied to company
strategic, operational, and marketing plans
Develop strategic lean deployment plan
Integrate customized training with lean to improve specific
skill sets, leverage training resources
Team Building, Communications, Problem Solving,
Change Management, Lean Manufacturing Tools
Conduct “Kaizen blitz” high impact events
5S, Manufacturing Cell, Set-Up Reductions, Inventory
Reductions, Work Standardization
Use an enterprise wide approach to help “Transform” a
client’s culture and the way they do business.
Progress Toward Lean
Smaller lot sizes
Increased capacity / throughput
Higher inventory turns
More available floor space
Improved workplace organization
Improved quality : reduced scrap / re-work
Reduced inventories : raw, WIP, FG
Reduced lead times
Greater gross margin
Improved participation & morale
Lean Is A Journey
The Journey never ends
Toyota estimates it is only 50% waste-
free
Where can we begin? Where can we
improve?
Origins
Lean Manufacturing is
sometimes called the
Toyota Production
System (TPS) because
Toyota Motor
Company’s Eiji Toyoda
and Taiichui Ohno are
given credit for its
approach and
innovations
Underlying Principles to TPS
Work shall be completely specified as to
content, sequence, timing, and outcome
Every customer-supplier connection, both
internal and external, must be direct and
specify personnel, methods, timing, and
quantity of goods or services provided
Product and service flows must be simple and
direct – goods and services are directed to a
specific person or machine
Any improvement in the system must be
made in accordance with the “scientific
method” at the lowest possible level in the
organization
Toyota Production System
Since the Toyota Production System
requires that activities, connections,
and flow paths have built-in tests to
signal problems automatically, gaps
become immediately evident.
Results of the TPS are improvements in
reliability, flexibility, safety, and
efficiency.
These lead to increase in market share
and profitability.
Timeline
Key Lean Manufacturing
Techniques
5S
Single Minute Exchange of Dies
Kanban
Cellular Manufacturing
Kaizen
5S
5S
Strategy for creating a well organized, smoothly
flowing manufacturing process
Why 5S?
• To eliminate the wastes that result
from “uncontrolled” processes.
• To gain control on equipment,
material & inventory placement and
position.
• Apply Control Techniques to Eliminate
Erosion of Improvements.
• Standardize Improvements for
Maintenance of Critical Process
Parameters.
5S Examples
Before After
5S Examples
Before After
5S Examples
Before After
Sort
When in doubt, move it out
Prepare red tags
Attach red tags to unneeded items
Remove red-tagged items to “dinosaur
burial ground”
Evaluate / disposition of red-tagged
items
Straighten
Make it obvious where things belong
Lines
○ Divider lines
○ Outlines
○ Limit lines (height, minimum/maximum)
○ Arrows show direction
Labels
○ Color coding
○ Item location
Signs
○ Equipment related information
○ Show location, type, quantity, etc.
Shine
Clean everything, inside and out
Inspect through cleaning
Prevent dirt, and contamination from
reoccurring
Results in
○ Fewer breakdowns
○ Greater safety
○ Product quality
○ More satisfying work environment
Standardize
Establish guidelines for the team 5-S
conditions
Internal elements of work can only be done while the machine is stopped e.g. change
the tool, adjust the machine depth, sharpen a tool (which requires the machine to be
stopped), etc..
SMED Examples
SMED Examples
SMED
Examples
SMED Examples
For example:
A slide clamp reduced the time required to load and unload parts to fixture.
2 hold-down clamps eliminated the need to tape parts during a glue-up operation.
Set slide allows quick (temporary) alignment of 2 parts.
SMED Examples
Split thread bolts
Handles
Toggle clamps
U-shaped washers
Make the tool part of the screw device -- you don’t need a tool, and
this will save time in disassembling and reassembling the tooling and
fixturing!
05/30/10 25
Reduce the
amount of
turns required
in order to
activate the
screw.
Reduce the
amount of
screw turns and
eliminate the
tool!
0 28
Benefits of SMED
Transition to Lean is
difficult since a company
must build a culture
where learning and
continuous improvement
are the norm.
Success of lean requires
the full commitment and
involvement of all
employees and of the
company’s suppliers.
How People Benefit from Lean
Element Traditional Lean Improvement
Reduction of Inventory
Less space necessary to hold inventory
Reduced Waste
Decreased Production Cost
Increased market share
Able to provide what the customer wants quickly
Increased competitive advantage
Faster response to the customer
Lower Cost
Higher Quality
Changes in Lean since the
beginning
Inventory Comparison
Inventory Turnover – annual cost of
goods sold from the income
statement divided by the value of
inventory from the balance sheet
Quality Control
6 sigma process
Combination of old and new ideas
6 ingredients
Genuine focus on the customer
Data- and fact-driven management
Process focus, management, and improvement
Proactive management
Boundarlyless collaboration
Drive for perfection, tolerance failure
Lean
Maintenance
A Simultaneous Approach
6 Tools for Lean Maintenance
Visual Controls
5S
Seven Wastes
Single Minute Exchange of Dies
Poka-yoke
Total Productive Maintenance
Other impacts of Lean
Bell South – service industry
Management system and operations
Control
Process management, work measurement,
management control, and people development
Combines lean and 6 sigma
Woburn Safari Parks
Feed logistics
Animal Resource Planning
Background
Poli-film America Inc. a division of a German owned company.
Manufactures protective masking that prevents abrasion and
staining of exposed surfaces during manufacturing and
delivery
Industries Using Material:
Plastics
Automotives
Construction
Electronics
Laminates
Furniture
Textiles
High demand product
24/7 production
Problems
An enterprise resource planning system that
encompassed an unstable database
The database was untrustworthy account of inventory,
hand counts were necessary to confirm the numbers
counted by computers
Led to many employees spending many hours and led to
low processing and limit of work utilization
Lack of frequency in supplies and storage – errors in
production and set limits
Unable to trace items
Main concern – program’s ability to adapt to
changing processes and production goals while still
maintaining inventory traceability real time data
with multiple distribution sites
Results
Chose a new program to implement in later 2003