Title: Lean University The Skinny On Getting Lean CACUBO 2005
1Lean UniversityThe Skinny On Getting
LeanCACUBO 2005
2Introductions
- Steve Kreidler is the executive vice president at
the University of Central Oklahoma
(www.ucok.edu), a master's degree granting
university with 15,950 students. Kreidler is
responsible for administrative duties including
budget, human resources, physical plant, legal,
accounting, purchasing, public safety, and fund
development. He brought the Lean concept to the
university from his prior career working to help
improve the profitability of corporations in
Oklahoma and adapted the principles to meet the
needs of the academic environment.
3Introductions
- Mark Nash is a managing director with Argent
Global Services, a process engineering and
management consulting firm specializing in
productivity improvement, quality control, and
cost reduction strategies for a variety of
industries. Argent and UCO partnered to create
The Lean University to great success. Argent's
customers range from Johns Hopkins and Zenith to
Dayton Tire and Tinker Air Force Base.
4Agenda
- Why Did UCO Need To Get Lean? 15 minutes
- Set Up Lean Simulation 5 minutes
- Dynamics of Lean University/ Simulation In
Process 15 minutes - End Simulation and Get Results 5 minutes
- Implementation of Lean University 15 minutes
- Q A 5 minutes
5UCO Overview
Snapshot
- The University of Central Oklahoma is ranked
among the top 5 of universities across the US by
number of students enrolled. UCOs current
enrollment is 15,950 students. - Originally a Normal school, UCO has grown to 5
colleges, a sizable graduate college, and has
students from all 77 counties in Oklahoma, all 50
States, and 84 foreign countries. - 16 of all college degrees in Oklahoma are
granted by UCO. For FY 05 UCO granted over 2,500
bachelors and masters degrees.
6UCO Overview UCO Student Demographics
- 67 are full time students
- 72 are under the age of 25
- In the past five years, the fastest growing
portion of the student population is the 20 and
under group - UCO is ethnically diverse over the past five
years - African-American enrollment is up 32
- American-Indian enrollment is up 41
- Hispanic enrollment is up 30
7(No Transcript)
8(No Transcript)
9(No Transcript)
10(No Transcript)
11UCO Overview UCO Growth
Pattern
Fall Semester Enrollment
18,000
16,000
14,000
12,000
10,000
8,000
6,000
4,000
2,000
0
1891 1901 1911 1921 1931
1941 1951 1961 1971 1981
1991 2001
12State Appropriations History
State Appropriations/FTE
13State Appropriations History Gap in /FTE
UCO Compared to Regionals and OU/OSU
- UCO receives 20 less State appropriation
(915/student FTE) than the average of the
regional universities in Oklahoma. The funding
gap is 10,465,000 per year. - UCO receives 32.5 (1,717) per student FTE less
than the comprehensive universities.
14The Set Up For Getting Lean(Or, OK, Now Im
Really Ticked Off)
- FY 02 Headcount 14,741
- FY 06 Headcount 15,953 1,212
- FY 02 FTE 10,995
- FY 06 FTE 12,297 1,302
- FY 02 State Allocation 46,292,366
- FY 06 State Allocation 45,408,297 lt884,069gt
15UCO Overview
16Lean University
- Operating System We are problem solvers
- Basic Human Values govern our actions
- Civility
- Respect
- Inclusiveness
- Integrity The Light of Day Rule
- Public-Private partnership
- Using the knowledge of the university
- Leveraging private sector world-class practices
17Workplace Expectations
- Timely response to contacts
- Timely resolutions to problems and opportunities
- Communication and training are our responsibility
- Empower our customers to do more
- Quality customer value
18Paths To Success
- Reduce red tape
- Simple to navigate, few moving parts
- Clear rules and regulations
- Create processes that reduce crisis management
- Strategic partners in every endeavor
- Long range and scenario planning
- Leadership development
- Cross training
19Words To Live By
- Do not believe that it is very much of an
advance to do the unnecessary three times as
fast - Peter Drucker
- Bureaucracy defends the status quo long past the
time when the quo has lost its status - Laurence Peter
20Some Books That Helped Us Along the Way
Good to Great
Execution
By Michael Hammer
By Jim Collins
- By Larry Bossidy,
- Ram Charan
21Some Books That Helped Us Along the Way
Leadership On The Line
Execution
By Ronald Heifetz, Marty Linsky
- By James Womack, Daniel Jones
22Four Stages of the Lean University
- Opportunity Identification
- Solution Design
- Implementation
- Continuous Improvement
23And Along Came AQIP
- Academic Quality Improvement Project
- UCO decision to follow AQIP path for NCA based
upon 10 year accreditation - Lean University begins within Administration and
moves to all areas of campus as part of our
quality initiatives.
24Opportunity Identification
- Campus wide diagnostic through direct customer
meetings with over 200 personnel and students
25Solution Design
- Concepts Training
- Define Processes (as opposed to departments)
- Value Stream Mapping
- Assess customer needs for each process
- Benchmark current and best practices, then adopt
and adapt - Implementation
26Start Lean SimulationNeed Volunteers
27Defining Lean
- A systematic approach to identifying and
eliminating waste through continuous improvement
by flowing the product or service at the pull of
the customer in pursuit of perfection.
28The Origins of Lean
- World War II
- Dr. W. Edwards Deming
- Taiichi Ono
- Shigeo Shingo
- Toyota Motor Company
- Georgetown, Kentucky
29The Eight Wastes of Lean
- Overproduction
- Excess Inventory
- Excess/Unnecessary Travel
- Unnecessary Processing
- Waiting
- Excess Motion
- Defects
- Under-utilized People
30Eight Wastes
- Excess Inventory
- Any supply in excess of a one-piece flow through
your manufacturing process - More forms than you need
- Surplus parts
- Excess office supplies
- Defects
- Causes of defects
- Weak process control
- Poor quality
- Inadequate education, training, or work
instructions
31Eight Wastes
- Processing Waste
- Effort that adds no value to the product or
service from the customers viewpoint - Product changes without process changes
- Just-in-case logic
- Lack of communication
- Redundant approvals
- Extra copies or excessive information
- Waiting
- Waiting for what?
- Anything!
32Eight Wastes
- People Waste
- The waste of not using peoples mental, creative,
and physical abilities - Old guard thinking, politics, the business
culture - Poor hiring practices
- Low or no investment in training
- Low pay, high turnover strategy
- Motion Waste
- Any movement of people or machines that does not
add value to the product or service - Inconsistent work methods
- Unfavorable facility or cell layout
- Poor workplace organization and housekeeping
- Extra busy movements while waiting
33Eight Wastes
- Overproduction
- Making more than is required by the next process
- Making earlier than is required by the next
process - Making faster than is required by the next
process - Just-in-case logic
- Long process setup
- Unlevel scheduling
- Unbalanced workload
- Excess Travel
- Transporting people, paper, parts and materials
around the campus - Poor layout
- Poor understanding of the process flow for
production - Large batch sizes, long lead times, and off- site
areas
34The Lean Toolbox
35Value Stream Mapping Current State
36Value Stream Mapping Current State
37Visual Controls
- Simple signals that provide an immediate
understanding of a situation or condition. They
are efficient, self-regulating, and
worker-managed. - Examples
- Kanban cards
- Color-coded dies, tools, pallets
- Lines on the floor to delineate storage areas,
walkways, work areas, etc. - Andon lights
38Standardized Work
- Tasks safely carried out with all tasks organized
in the best known sequence, and using the most
effective combination of these resources - People
- Materials
- Methods
- Machines
Doing the same thing the same way every single
time!
39Efficiency I versus We
- The Individual Approach
- Employees working at different speeds
- Lots of queuing time
- Often batch and island thinking takes over
- Difficult to keep the process on track
- The Team Approach
- Employees process similar amounts of work at
similar speed - No/Low queuing times
- Team mentality focuses on completing the work
for the customer
40Continuous Flow
- The process of completely finishing one piece or
item of the - product or service, in process step order, before
beginning the - task of adding value to another item or
occurrence -
- Why?
- Eliminates double handling of paperwork,
materials, etc. - Maintains the quality focus on the current
customer until they are satisfied. - Reduces the amount of In-Process work
- Provides an environment that is both user and
customer friendly
41End of Simulation
42Before
43After
44Implementation
- Pilot Project
- Work order system
- Incredible success
- Phased Rollout with parallel tracks
- Facilities Management
- Work order system, key control, motor pool
- Administrative Services
- Bids and contracts, crisis management, ID card,
and hiring all underway - Admissions
- International student admissions and enrollment
45Implementation
- Techniques and Tools
- Quality Concepts
- Lean Enterprise Concepts
- Employee Involvement
- Kaizen Events
- Focused Improvement Efforts
- Five Day Duration
- Continuous Improvement
46Pilot Project Results Work Order
System
Current State
47Pilot Project Results Work Order
System
Future State
48Tangible Results
- Before
- 3,000 open work orders
- Some more than 1 year old
- Non-emergency work average of 6 months response
time - 28 touches of paperwork from customer initiation
to completion of job
49Tangible Results Event
Scorecard
50Tangible Results
- After
- Now at 300 open work orders
- Average response time to completion of all jobs
under 3 days - Most work orders completed day of request
- Only 5 touches of paper!
51Tangible Results
- After
- Saved 6,750 work hours per year, about 75,000
worth of labor redirected - Eliminated one job in front office which was
moved to HR - Extremely satisfied customers our 1 service in
Administrative Services today
52Motor Pool Before Lean
53Motor Pool After 5S
54International Admissions
- International Graduate College Application
Process - Before Lean
- Most recent full-year application cycle completed
- 179 International graduate student applications
- 82 International graduate students accepted
- Takt Time 10.9 hours per application
- One every 1.36 days
- This is how often a decision must be reached on
an application
55International Admissions
- Before Lean
- Process Lead Time is 68.9 days
- Total Work Content Time is 6.5 hours
- 18 different letters are generated
- Copied and filed at 2-4 locations
- Successful student will receive 11 different
letters - Travel path of application on campus is 7,096 ft.
- Application packet handed-off 17 times
56Tangible Results
International Admissions Event Scorecard
57What Went Wrong With International Admissions
Lean Process
- Did not successfully redefine processes over
departments - Did not get agreement from the top of the two VP
divisions on the true customer needs for service
improvement - Personal antipathy between director of the
Graduate Office and the Director of International
Office scuttled the agreed upon work of their
employees, who DID agree on solutions
58Extreme Success
- Work Order System
- Purchasing
- HR/Hiring
- Financial Aid/Bursar office merger
59On Deck
- Merger of Admissions, Advisement, Recruitment,
Financial Aid/Bursar into new Enrollment
Management office - Capital projects process (AE, Budget, Board of
Regents of Oklahoma Colleges, Oklahoma State
Regents for Higher Education, State Legislature,
Office of State Finance, Department of Central
Services, and some more friends along the road)
60Closing
- Questions
- Comments
- Etc.
- Etc.
- http//administration.ucok.edu/admin/vp_present.ht
m