Title: Perekayasaan Semula (Reengineering) dan Kaizen
1Unit 11
- Perekayasaan Semula (Reengineering) dan Kaizen
2Bahagian 1. Kaizen
3KAIZEN
- Assoc. Prof. Dr. Jegak Uli
4Unit Objectives
- To understand the basic concept of kaizen
- To compare Western and Japanese approach to
management - To compare the innovation and kaizen-based
strategy - To describe the elements and umbrella of Kaizen
5KAIZEN THE CONCEPT
- KAIZEN as originally defined in the book of
"KAIZEN, the Key to Japan's Competitive Success",
by Mr. Masaaki Imai, is - KAIZEN means improvement.
- Moreover, KAIZEN means continuing improvement in
personal life, home life, social life, and
working life. - When applied to the workplace KAIZEN means
continuing improvement involving everyone -
managers and workers alike.
6KAIZEN THE CONCEPT
- Kaizen means improvement
- Kaizen means ongoing improvement involving
everyone, including both managers and workers - Kaizen philosophy assumes that our way of life
be it our working life, our social life, or our
home life deserves to be constantly improved
7KAIZEN THE CONCEPT
- The message is not a day should go by without
some kind of improvement being made somewhere in
the company - Simply staying in business required unending
progress, and Kaizen has become a way of life
8KAIZEN THE CONCEPT
- 1. Means improvement
- 2. Ongoing improvement involving everyone top
management, managers, and workers - 3. There will be no progress if you keep on
doing things exactly the same way all the time - 4. It is everybodys business
9WESTERN VS JAPANESE APPROACH TO MANAGEMENT
- Japanese
- Japanese kaizen and its process-oriented way of
thinking - Its messages is one of improvement and trying to
do better - It does not mean that innovation can or should be
forgotten. - Both innovation Kaizen are needed
- Western
- Wests innovation-and results-oriented thinking
- Innovation strategy is technology driven and
thrives on fast growth and high profit margins - Practice of reviewing peoples performance
strictly on the basis of results and not
rewarding effort made
10JAPANESE MANAGEMENT
- Has two major components
- 1. Maintenance activities directed toward
maintaining current technological, managerial and
operating standards - 2. Improvement those directed toward improving
current operating standards - 3. Improvement can be broken down into KAIZEN and
INNOVATION
11JAPANESE MANAGEMENT
- In Japanese management, three (3) functions
should happen simultaneously within any
organizations - Maintenance,
- Innovation, and
- KAIZEN.
121. Maintenance
- By maintenance, we refer to maintaining the
current status, the procedures are set and the
standards are implemented. - People in the lower level of organization mostly
do that, they maintain their standards.
132. Innovation
- By Innovation, we refer to breakthrough
activities initiated by top management, buying
new machines, new equipment, developing new
markets, directing RD, change of strategy etc.
143. KAIZEN
- In the middle there is KAIZEN, small steps but
continuing improvement. - KAIZEN should be implemented by the lower/middle
management and the workers, with the
encouragement and direction of the top. - The top management responsibility is to cultivate
a KAIZEN working climates and cultures in the
organization.
15JAPANESE MANAGEMENT
- Innovation involves a drastic improvement in the
status quo as a result of large investment in new
technology and/or equipment
- Kaizen signifies small improvements made in the
status quo as a result of on going efforts
16WESTERN MANAGEMENT
- Western perception of management is given in
Figure 3 - There is little room for KAIZEN concept
- The worst companies are those which do nothing
but maintenance no internal drive for kaizen or
innovation
17Comparison of Innovation and Kaizen-based Strategy
- Innovation
- Creativity
- Individualism
- Specialist-oriented
- Attention to great leaps
- Technology-oriented
- Information closed, proprietary
- Functional (specialist) orientation
- Seek new technology
- Line staff
- Limited feedback
- Kaizen
- Adaptability
- Teamwork (systems approach)
- Generalist-oriented
- Attention to details
- People-oriented
- Information open, shared
- Cross-functional orientation
- Build on existing technology
- Cross-functional organization
- Comprehensive feedback
18Important Elements of Kaizen
- 1. A systematic and collaborative approach to
cross-functional problem-solving - 2. A custom-driven strategy for improvement
seek to satisfy the customer and serve customer
needs - 3. A system approach and problem-solving tools
19Important Elements of Kaizen
- 4. A process-oriented way of thinking and
peoples process-oriented efforts for improvement - 5. A gradual rather than abrupt change
- 6. Everybodys business
20The Kaizen Umbrella
- Customer orientation
- TQC (total quality control) or CWQC (Company-wide
Quality Control) - Robotics
- QC (Quality Control) Circles
- Suggestion system
- Automation
- Discipline in the workplace
- TPM (Total Productive Maintenance)
- Kamban (signboards, cards or chits)
- Quality improvement
- Just-in-time (JIT)
- Zero defects (ZD)
- Small-group activities
- Cooperative labor-management relations
- Productivity improvement
- New-product development
21Problem-solving is the Starting Point of KAIZEN
- The starting point of kaizen is to recognize the
need - This comes from recognition of a problem
- If no problem is recognized, there is no
recognition of the need for improvement - Complacency is the arch enemy of KAIZEN
22Problem-solving is the Starting Point of KAIZEN
- It emphasizes problem-awareness and provides
clues for identifying problems - Once identified, problems must be solved
- Thus Kaizen is a problem-solving process
- Kaizen requires the use of various
problem-solving tools - Improvement reaches new heights with every
problem is solved the improvement must be
standardized
23Kaizen and QC Circles, TQC , CWQC
- A QC circle is defined as a small group that
voluntarily performs quality-control (QC)
activities within the shop - The small group carries out its work continuously
as part of a company-wide program of quality
control or TQC (total quality control) or CWQC
(company-wide quality control) and improvement
within the workshop
24Kaizen and QC Circles, TQC , CWQC
- Over the years, QC has been elevated to SQC
(statistical quality control), and then TQC or
CWQC - TQC and CWQC mean company-wide Kaizen activities
involving everyone in the company, managers and
workers alike - QC circles have played an important part in
improving product quality and productivity
25Insemination of KAIZEN into the Organization
- Not a day should go without some kind of
improvement being made somewhere in the company. - When KAIZEN is adapted in organizations and
management perspectives, however, it is easier to
talk about it than to implement it. - It is very natural that people will propose some
kind of change in their own work place, when they
become unsatisfied with their present conditions.
- Some of the improvements could be carried out
right away.
26Insemination of KAIZEN into the Organization
- Perhaps, the boss won't even notice them.
- However, when approval is required, several kinds
of responses from the boss could have taken
place. - The ideal situation is that the boss encourages
their subordinates to carry out their ideas. - The boss then appreciates the efforts or gives
recognition.
27Insemination of KAIZEN into the Organization
- That's what people expect when they propose
something. - The positive response given by the boss will then
develop trust with the subordinates and stimulate
other improvements. - Cumulatively, this will create momentum for
continuing improvement.
28BASIC TIPS FOR KAIZEN ACTIVITIES
- Discard conventional fixed ideas.
- Think of how to do it, not why it cannot be done.
- Do not make excuses. Start by questioning current
practices.
29BASIC TIPS FOR KAIZEN ACTIVITIES
- Do not seek perfection. Do it right away even if
for only 50 of target. - Correct it right away, if you make mistake.
- Do not spend money for KAIZEN, use your wisdom.
30BASIC TIPS FOR KAIZEN ACTIVITIES
- Wisdom is brought out when faced with hardship.
- Ask 'WHY?" five times and seek root causes.
- Seek the wisdom of ten people rather than the
knowledge of one. - KAIZEN ideas are infinite
31Bahagian II Perekayasaan Semula (Reengineering)
32Reengineering some basic concepts
33The Official Definition
- The fundamental rethinking and radical redesign
of business processes to bring about dramatic
improvements in performance.
34The Key Words
- dramatic -- improvements not marginal, not 5 or
10 but quantum leaps. - radical -- going to the roots of things. Starting
over, reinventing. - process -- a group of related tasks that together
create value for customers e.g.. order
fulfillment. - redesign -- the design of processes, how work is
done
35What Reengineering is Not
- it is not downsizing
- it is not restructuring
- it is not a fad -- it works, brings about huge
improvements - it is not more of the same -- it is
revolutionary. Focus on end to end processes and
not specialization of labor
36The Three Cs
- CUSTOMERS -- more sophisticated, demanding, more
alternatives, more knowledgeable - COMPETITION -- no longer local and gentle, but
more global and cutthroat. - CHANGE -- change from trad.focus on planning,
control, and managed growth to emphasis on speed,
innovation, flexibility, quality, service, and
cost.
37Top Ten Ways to Fail
- 1. Giving only lip service to reengineer
- 2. Dont focus on processes
- 3. Spend a lot of time analyzing the current
situation - 4. Proceed without strong executive leadership
- 5. Be timid in redesign
38Top Ten (contd.)
- 6. Go directly from conceptual design to
implementation - 7. Reengineer slowly
- 8. Place some aspects of the business off-limits
- 9. Adopt a conventional implementation style.
- 10. Ignore concerns of your people
39The Primary Ingredients
- Leadership
- The Reengineering Team
40The Tools of Reengineering Leadership
- SIGNALS -- Explicit Communications
- SYMBOLS -- Personal Behavior
- SYSTEMS -- Measurements and Rewards
41The Profile of a Reengineer
- Process oriented
- Holistic perspective
- Creativity
- Restlessness
- Enthusiasm
- Optimism
- Persistence
- Tact
- Team player
- Communication skills
42The Content of Reengineering Work
- Understanding the old processes and customer
requirements - Inventing a new process design that shatters old
assumptions - Constructing the new process-- details of
operations, taking care of implications, training - Selling the new way
43The Context of Re-e Efforts
- Uncertainty -- uncertainty eliminated gradually
- Experimentation -- iterative. Designing on paper
must be followed by trying in reality - Pressure -- must proceed at fast pace. Always
operate under conditions of great urgency and
intensity
44Focus of Team Members
- Must share dedication to three things
- The process being reeingineered
- The needs of the customer of that process
- The team itself
45Example of team characteristics
46Problem, Rule, and Assumption
- PROBLEM -- a specific performance shortcoming of
the process e.g.. slow cycle time. - RULE -- a specific aspect of the process design
that causes the problem e.g.. must have
specialist for each task. - ASSUMPTION -- a belief that gives rise to the
rule e.g.. the work is complex
47Principles for Overcoming Resistance to Change
- Resistance is natural and inevitable --Expect it.
- Resistance is not always apparent -- Find it.
- Resistance has many motivations -- Understand it
- Deal with peoples concerns not their arguments
-- Confront it - Theres no one way to deal with resistance --
Manage it
48The Key Mechanisms for Overcoming Resistance
- INCENTIVES -- positive and negative
- INFORMATION -- dispel uncertainty and fear
- INTERVENTION -- one-on-one connection
- INDOCTRINATION -- make change seem inevitable
- INVOLVEMENT -- make people part of the effort
49Selling the Change
- Impediments to communications
- Ten Principles of Reengineering communications
50Impediments to Communications
- Disbelief
- False familiarity
- Fear of layoffs
- The rumor mill
- Sloppy execution -- incomprehensibility,
abstractions, complexity, and clichés
51 Ten Principles of Re-eng Communications
- 1. Segment the audience
- 2. Use multiple channels
- 3. Use multiple sources
- 4. Be clear
- 5. Communicate, communicate, communicate
52Ten Principles (contd.)
- 6. Honesty is the only policy
- 7. Use emotions, not just logic
- 8. Heal, console, encourage
- 9. Make the message tangible
- 10. Listen, listen, listen
53References
- Hammer, M. and Champy, J. Reengineering the
Corporation A Manifesto for Business
Revloution.HarperCollins, New York, 1993 - Hammer, M. and Stanton, S.A. The Reengineering
Revolution A Handbook. HarperCollins, New York,
1995.
54The End