Title: The S
1The SOP/Lean ConnectionMaking Lean work with
demand variability
AMETOTONTO2008 From Good to Great
October 20-24, 2008 Toronto, Canada
Bob StahlBill Kerber
2Who are We?
3The 4P Model of the Toyota Way
The Toyota Production System TPS is the basis
for much of the lean production movement that
has dominated manufacturing trends for the last
10 years or so. Jeffrey Liker The Toyota Way
Our Focus
4Toyota Flow Model
Push
There is nothing illegal, immoral, or fattening
with this approach, but many (most) companies
cant afford, or simply cant follow, this
approach to creating linearity with very large
finished goods inventory. For Toyota, as we all
know, it has worked very very well!
Linearity
. . . many businesses in America are rushing to
a build-to-order model of production. They want
to make just what the customers want when they
want it -- the ultimate lean solution.
Unfortunately, customers are not predictable and
actual orders vary significantly from week to
week and month to month. Jeffrey Liker The
Toyota Way
Toyota Assembly
Customers
Schedule (to dealer orders/ forecast)
Demand Pull
FG Inv. Buffer
Variable Demand
5LEIs Interpretation
- LEIs Seven Characteristics of a Lean Value
Stream - Takt
- Finished goods strategy
- Flow
- Pull where cant flow
- Scheduling at one point
- Pitch
- EPEI
James P. Womack Danie T. Jones
6Master Schedule definition . . .
- The tool that balances demand and supply at the
product level, as opposed to Executive SOP which
balances demand and supply at the aggregated
Product Family level. It is the source of
customer order promising, via its
Available-to-Promise capability, and contains the
anticipated build schedule for the plant(s) in
the form of the Master Production Schedule.
7An Inconvenient Truth . . .(with apologies to Al
Gore)
- In general, when you try to apply the Toyota
Production System TPS, the first thing you have
to do is to even out or level the production. - Leveling the production schedule may require some
front-loading of shipments push to dealers or
postponing delaying of shipments and you may
have to ask some customers dealers to wait for
a short period of time. - Once the production level is more or less the
same or constant for a month, you will be able to
apply pull systems and balance the assembly line.
- But if production levels the output vary from
day to day, there is no sense in trying to apply
those other pull systems, because you simply
cannot establish standardized work under such
circumstances.
Fugio Cho Toyota President
8Big Fat Question(s) . . .
- What if it impossible or unaffordable to have FG
Inventory as a buffer? - How do you do Lean, if not exactly the Toyota
Way? - Thats why were here!
9Agenda . . .
- Introduction
- The many tools for improving effectiveness
- Lean focus versus SOP focus
- How does the Toyota Production System work?
- What are the problems?
- Market Forecast versus Production Leveling
- FG Inventory as the only buffer
- What are the solutions?
- Solve the Family Feud
- Buffer without Finished Goods Inventory
- Backlog buffer (Lead Time)
- Component Inventory - Postponement
- Flexible resources
- Questions and Answers.
10The New World of Manufacturing
Best in Class
- High Quality
- Low Cost (Low Inventory)
- Customer Service
- Quick Response
- Reliability
- Wide Variety
Getting to AND . . . Diminishing OR
11The Many Tools for Improving Effectiveness
Increase Reliability
Total Quality, Six Sigma, Poka-Yoke, ISO others
X
X
X
Sales Operations Planning, ERP, Kanban, VMI,
others
Lean Mfg., Just-In-Time, Quick Changeover
(SMED), Flow others
12The Many Tools for Improving Effectiveness
Increase Reliability
X
Enhance Coordination
Reduce Waste Time
13The Many Tools for Improving Effectiveness
Total Quality, Six Sigma, Poka-Yoke, ISO others
Increase Reliability
Sales Operations Planning, ERP, Kanban, VMI,
others
X
Lean Mfg., Just-In-Time, Quick Changeover
(SMED), Flow others
Enhance Coordination
Reduce Waste Time
Blur the boundaries
14Lean Executive SOP Do Different (Necessary)
Things
- Lean Manufacturing
- Lean is a basic approach to manufacturing that
emphasizes/focuses on flow. - It also has a focus on eliminating waste from
processes - Strong on execution
- Short future horizon
- Drives improvements to the operating environment
- Flow works best with stable and linear demand
- Executive SOP
- Tools for forward decision-making
- Strong on planning
- Long future horizon
- Balances demand and supply across the supply
chain - Executive Forum for establishing relevant
strategy, policy, and risk - Can be used in many different environments
- In a broad sense, they both get at culture!
- They work best when they work together!
15Agenda . . .
- Introduction
- The many tools for improving effectiveness
- Lean focus versus SOP focus
- How does the Toyota Production System work?
- What are the problems?
- Market Forecast versus Production Leveling
- FG Inventory as the only buffer
- What are the solutions?
- Solve the Family Feud
- Buffer without Finished Goods Inventory
- Backlog buffer (Lead Time)
- Component Inventory - Postponement
- Flexible resources
- Questions and Answers.
16Production Strategies
- Level - Most often associated with Make to Stock.
To achieve a level production, a buffer against
variable demand must be used. - Chase - Most often Make to order. Also could be
called variable capacity. - Hybrid - A combination.
17Toyota StrategyPart A
18Toyota StrategyPart B
19Why This Works?
- Toyotas high quality and market acceptance
allows limited variety - With a limited number of end items
- Schedule by end item
- Dont configure (finish) to order
- Alignment of markets and resources
20Product Environment
Levels
of Parts
In this shape a few end items are made from
many parts, materials, and components. An
example would be an equipment manufacturer such
as automobiles, lawn mowers, capital equipment,
etc. This shape lends itself to making to
stock.
21Product Environment
22Toyota Flow Model
Push
Linearity
Toyota Assembly
Customers
Demand Pull
Schedule (to dealer orders/ forecast)
FG Inv. Buffer
Variable Demand
23Demand-Supply Alignment(A second issue)
24Takt Time . . .
- Takt is a German word for rhythm or meter. Takt
is the rate of customer demand -- the rate at
which the customer is buying product. - . . . Takt can be used to set the pace of
production. - Continuous flow and takt time are most easily
applied in repetitive manufacturing . . . - Jeffrey Liker
- The Toyota Way
25Takt time . . .
- Demand rate?
- or
- Production Rate?
26Agenda . . .
- Introduction
- The many tools for improving effectiveness
- Lean focus versus SOP focus
- How does the Toyota Production System work?
- What are the problems?
- Market Forecasting versus Production Leveling
- FG Inventory as the only buffer
- What are the solutions?
- Solve the Family Feud
- Buffer without Finished Goods Inventory
- Backlog buffer (Lead Time)
- Component Inventory - Postponement
- Flexible resources
- Questions and Answers.
27A primer on SOP . . .
Most Detail Aggregate Only Exac Config. .
.Precise Matl. . . People. . .Capital Equip . .
.Factory Space
- Lost in the woods- Detail
- Engage Top Management?
- Added Little Value outside the Planning Time
Fence
28The Four Fundamentals of SOP . . .
- How Much?
- Rates
- The Big Picture
- Families
- Strategy/Policy/Risk
- Monthly / 18 - 36 Mos
- Executive Resp.
- Which Ones?
- Timing/Sequence
- The Details
- Products/SKUs/Orders
- Tactics/Execution
- Weekly/Daily 1-3 Mos
- Middle Mgt. Resp.
Mix
Plan the Volume Schedule the Mix
29Suicide Quadrant . . .
PTF
1 Suicide Quadrant
3 Building to Customer Demand
Detail
Horizon
30Sales Operations Planning
Executive SOP
Volume
DemandPlanning
Supply Planning
Demand
Supply
Mix
31Master Schedule definition . . .
- The tool that balances demand and supply at the
product level, as opposed to Executive SOP which
balances demand and supply at the aggregated
Family level. It is the source of customer order
promising, via its Available-to-Promise
capability, and contains the anticipated build
schedule for the plant(s) in the form of the
Master Production Schedule. - Sales Opertations Planning-The How To Handbook,
3rd Edition - Wallace Stahl, 2008
32What is Executive SOP?
- Sales Operations Planning
- is a Executive Decision-Making Process
- toBalance Demand Supply
- (at the volume level)
- isThe forum for setting Relevant Strategy
Policy - and Integrates Financial Operating Plans
(update/validate the Annual Business Plan) - Top Managements Handle on the Business
33The Family Feud . . .
Definition - Executive SOP Families A grouping
of end items whose similarity allow the markets
to be best anticipated, and enables resources to
be planned.
34Forecasting
Inputs -- Process -- Output
Forecasts that are
1. Reasoned 2. Reasonable 3. Reviewed
Frequently 4. Represent Total Demand
Process
35Forecasting
Inputs -- Process -- Output
Forecasts that are
1. Reasoned 2. Reasonable 3. Reviewed
Frequently 4. Represent Total Demand
Process
36Executive SOP Focus
Volume
Market Centric
Shipments
POS
Mfg. Company
Markets
Customers
Customer Centric
Mix
37The Family Feud . . .
- SOP Families -- In Executive SOP, Families are
aggregate groups of products that are similar in
the way that customers and/or markets view their
use. Executive SOP Families are used to develop
a reasoned and reasonable forecast based on
market trends, grounded in intrinsic and
extrinsic leading indicators. - Lean Families -- In Lean Manufacturing, the term
Families is used to mean the grouping of products
that are manufactured by the same resources. This
is often called a value stream. The idea is to
create a synchronous flow in manufacturing that
allows products to be produced at a uniform and
linear market driven rate known as Takt Time.
38Conclusion . . .
- Executive SOP families should be market
determined - Lean families should be manufacturing (process)
determined - They are different because they serve different
purposes
39Family Feud . . .When are they the same?
World Wide Widget Company
Supply
Demand
Typically NOT!
40Non-Aligned to Markets
World Wide Widget Company
Supply
Demand
How, then, do you do Lean Takt time, etc?
41Executive SOP Process
42Exercise 1
- Determine the families for Executive SOP from
the data provided.
43Product/Process Matrix
Cant do it --- No market data provided
44Market Drivers(Leading Indicators)
- Birth Rate
- Consumer confidence index
- Housing starts
- NASCAR TV ratings
- Price of gasoline
-
-
45Correlation Data
- A correlation study revealed the following
results (1.0 high correlation) - Wagons Sleds Vehicles
- Housing Starts 0.5 0.4 0.2
- Birth Rate 0.8 0.75 0.4
- New Unemp. Claims -0.4 -0.6 -0.4
- Personal Income 0.5 0.4 0.6
- NASCAR Viewers -0.2 -0.3 0.7
46SOP Families . . .
- What are the SOP Families?
- Wagons
- Sleds
- Vehicles
47Families . . .
- SOP Families -- In Executive SOP, Families are
aggregate groups of products that are similar in
the way that customers and/or markets view their
use. Executive SOP Families are used to develop
a reasoned and reasonable forecast based on
market trends, grounded in intrinsic and
extrinsic leading indicators. - Lean Families -- In Lean Manufacturing, the term
Families is used to mean the grouping of products
that are manufactured by the same resources. This
is often called a value stream. The idea is to
create a synchronous flow in manufacturing that
allows products to be produced at a uniform and
linear market driven rate known as Takt Time.
48Determining Lean product families
- Create a Product Family Matrix
- Separate processes based on capability (ex. The
machines are the same, but Part A can only be
produced on this one.) - Look at the Downstream processing steps
- Approximately 80 of the similar processing steps
- Custom products look Upstream at the
fabrication steps - Fill in Product Family Matrix with X
49Product Process Matrix
50Product/Process Matrix
51Batch Manufacturing
Sand
Notch
?
Stock Room
?
?
A
?
B
C
Finished Goods
?
?
Paint Room
Plate
?
Packaging
Injection Mold
?
?
?
?
Die Cast
?
?
?
?
Deburr
Trim
Final Assembly
52Exercise 2
- Determine the Lean product families based on the
data given
53Product/Process Matrix
54Product/Process Matrix
55Lean Process Flow
Die Cast
Deburr
Paint
Plate
A
Finished Goods
Final Assembly
Stockroom
B
Packaging
Trim
Sand
Paint
Notch
C
56Lean Families . . .
- What are the Lean (Value Stream) Families?
- Plastic Toys
- Wooden Toys
- Die Cast Toys
57Agenda . . .
- Introduction
- The many tools for improving effectiveness
- Lean focus versus SOP focus
- How does the Toyota Production System work?
- What are the problems?
- Market Forecasting versus Production Leveling
- FG Inventory as the only buffer
- What are the solutions?
- Solve the Family Feud
- Buffer without Finished Goods Inventory
- Backlog buffer (Lead Time)
- Component Inventory - Postponement
- Flexible resources
- Questions and Answers.
58Solving the Family Feud
Lean
Exec. SOP
Typically NOT!
59Non-Aligned to Markets
Lean
Exec. SOP
Plastic Toys
Wagons
Supply
Wooden Toys
Sleds
Demand
Die Cast Toys
Vehicles
Better than Job Shop! Rough Cut on Pacemaker
only!
60Job Shop . . .
Market Families
Production Resources
61Market Forecasts toLean Production
Lean
Exec. SOP
Plastic Toys
Wagons
70
30
100
Wooden Toys
Sleds
60
Die Cast Toys
Vehicles
40
62Managing Assumptions . . .(Control Charts)
63Demand Forecasts
64Wooden Demand Rate
65Rough-Cut Capacity Planning
66Production Strategies
- Level - Most often associated with Make to Stock.
To achieve a level production, a buffer against
variable demand must be used. - Chase - Most often Make to order. Also could be
called variable capacity. - Hybrid - A combination.
67Primer on Takt Time . . .
- Sets the Beat in the form of pitch for
production. - Determines how many people work in assembly jobs.
- Provides the bar for operator balance charts
for line balancing. - For all of these, takt would be better
represented by the production rate from SOP.
68Demand versus Production Rate?
- Current Lean definition has Takt time as
effective working time divided by demand rate - In most circumstances, we would be better off
making it effective working time divided by
Production rate (from SOP plan)
69People vs. Takt Time
Balanced Line
6 5 min
5 5 min
4 5 min
3 5 min
2 5 min
1 5 min
In
Time 480 min Units 16 Takt 30 min Operators
2
B
A
7 5 min
8 5 min
9 5 min
10 5 min
11 5 min
12 5 min
Out
Lead time 60 min
Balanced Line
6 5 min
5 5 min
4 5 min
3 5 min
2 5 min
1 5 min
In
Time 480 min Units 24 Takt 20 min Operators
3
C
B
A
7 5 min
8 5 min
9 5 min
10 5 min
11 5 min
12 5 min
Out
Lead time 60 min
70Operator Balance Chart
Values in Bars Cycle Time Takt Time 1.78
Minutes
Example of Unbalanced Line
Takt Time
2.5
0.5
1.5
1.75
1.25
More Improevment
Takt Time
0.21
1.78
1.78
1.78
1.78
Better Improvement
Takt Time
1.78
1.78
1.78
1.78
Operator 1
Operator 2
Operator 3
Operator 4
Operator 5
71Agenda . . .
- Introduction
- The many tools for improving effectiveness
- Lean focus versus SOP focus
- How does the Toyota Production System work?
- What are the problems?
- Market Forecasting versus Production Leveling
- FG Inventory as the only buffer
- What are the solutions?
- Solve the Family Feud
- Buffer without Finished Goods Inventory
- Backlog buffer (Lead Time)
- Component Inventory - Postponement
- Flexible resources
- Questions and Answers.
72Make-to-Order Flow
Demand Pull
Schedule (to forecast/customer order)
73Market Demands
- In this shape many end items are made out of a
few sub assemblies or intermediates that are made
out of many unique raw materials and parts. - An example of this would be a pharmaceutical
manufacturer with many package types from
standard product (aspirin), personal computers,
packaged chemicals - This shape lends itself to a postponement
strategy.
74How Lean fits in Postponement
75Finish-to-Order Flow(Postponement)
Demand Pull
Planning BOMs
Plant
Assembly
Customers
Suppliers
Standard Parts
Order Backlog
Schedule (to forecast)
Backlog Buffer
Variable Demand
Schedule (to Order)
76Agenda . . .
- Introduction
- The many tools for improving effectiveness
- Lean focus versus SOP focus
- How does the Toyota Production System work?
- What are the problems?
- Market Forecasting versus Production Leveling
- FG Inventory as the only buffer
- What are the solutions?
- Solve the Family Feud
- Buffer without Finished Goods Inventory
- Backlog buffer (Lead Time)
- Component Inventory - Postponement
- Flexible resources
- Questions and Answers.
77BOM Shape
- In this shape many end items are made from a
few raw materials. - An example would be an injection molding company
- This shape suggests a make to order strategy.
78How Lean fits in
You must make the lead time fit market
requirements!
79Chase Strategy
Production Demand Inventory (Backlog)
80This requires
- Cross training of everyone
- A way to know when to switch jobs during the
workday (controlling flow) - Adding or subtracting labor by using
- Temporary employees
- Overtime
- Subcontractors
- alternatively
- Staff for peak periods and work on improvements
when slow
81Conclusion
- SOP and Lean work best when they work together!
82Agenda . . .
- Introduction
- The many tools for improving effectiveness
- Lean focus versus SOP focus
- How does the Toyota Production System work?
- What are the problems?
- Market Forecast versus Production Leveling
- FG Inventory as the only buffer
- What are the solutions?
- Solve the Family Feud
- Buffer without Finished Goods Inventory
- Backlog buffer (Lead Time)
- Component Inventory - Postponement
- Flexible resources
- Questions and Answers.
83Thanks for Listening
- Bob Stahl
- RStahlSr_at_aol.com
- 508-226-0477
- Bill Kerber
- Bill_at_HighMixLean.com
- 609-781-4830