Lean/ JIT: A Way Of Life - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 22
About This Presentation
Title:

Lean/ JIT: A Way Of Life

Description:

Lean/ JIT: A Way Of Life Let s talk about inventory first The western concept of holding inventory is based on our culture 1) we have lots of land and space ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:178
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: Micha429
Category:
Tags: jit | causes | intervening | lean | life | way

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Lean/ JIT: A Way Of Life


1
Lean/ JIT A Way Of Life
  • Lets talk about inventory first
  • The western concept of holding inventory is based
    on our culture
  • 1) we have lots of land and space available to
    build warehouses to store inventory cheaply . In
    Japan, they dont.
  • 2) our culture promotes independence and
    innovation through antagonism Japans promotes
    harmony and cooperation

2
A Culture of holding inventory
  • For example in western companies, departments
    have traditionally worked independently. Example
    procurement goes for its incentivized goal
    (lowest unit cost) which may be
    counter-productive to an MRP model which would
    function ideally with lot for lot ordering. The
    result is carrying additional inventory.

3
A Culture of holding inventory
  • Another example Unionization promotes an
    antagonistic system with management and resulting
    work rules in which cross-training is
    dis-incentivized. The resulting band-aid
    inventory is built up at each station on the line
    to prevent bottlenecks that could be cured by
    cross-training.

4
The challenge
  • How do we create an atmosphere in which the
    creativity and personal ownership of the western
    antagonistic system continues, while reaping the
    benefits of the Japanese harmonious system?
  • One solution work pods of cross-trained
    individuals that are arranged along business
    processes and accountable to process leader and
    department leader. Requires management by a team
    as well

5
Getting back to inventory
  • Because weve traditionally viewed it as cheap,
    we havent seen that inventory has a higher TCO
    (total cost of ownership)
  • 1) Inventory hides root causes. If you have a
    machine thats constantly breaking down at one
    stage of the line, carrying inventory at that
    station is he band-aid to helping you cure the
    problem.

6
The Inventory TCO
  • 2) Inventory fosters mediocrity people resist
    change (improvement). Carrying lots of inventory
    at all stages of the line helps a group resist
    improvement by giving the appearance of an
    operation running smoothly. However, smooth
    operations can be incredibly wasteful operations

7
Inventory TCO
  • 3) Managing inventory doesnt add value! It
    doesnt matter to the end user of a product if it
    was produced in an MRP system or Lean/ JIT
    system except for the fact that the Lean/ JIT
    product may cost less because its company didnt
    have an army of inventory ants to document,
    finance, and move all the excess stuff around.

8
Beware the Japan trap!
  • Lean/ JIT looks pretty good right about now
  • Each system- western and Lean/ JIT has its merits
  • The question which can be adapted to its best
    performance based on the culture of the company?
  • Beware the management program of the week trap!
    Like any new philosophy of doing business, this
    one takes years of pain, suffering and commitment
    to implement

9
Lean/ JIT is a philosophy.
  • Even though it was designed for manufacturing,
    each of its tenants apply to service processes as
    well.
  • Romantic Lean/ JIT I read in a book about how
    Lean/ JIT worked for Toyota. Lean/ JIT is cool.
    Lets hang up some posters. Posters are cool.
  • Pragmatic Lean/ JIT Were going to start
    working slowly, process by process, to eliminate
    waste and inefficiency from our process

10
The hard work of Lean/ JIT
  • The culture of Lean/ JIT starts with management.
  • Question Anyone seen Roger and Me? What
    challenges would GMs culture present that would
    be roadblocks on the implementation of Lean/ JIT?
  • Unaccountable management
  • Resulting Unionization
  • Turf culture of brands and departments

11
The hard work of Lean/ JIT
  • Managers have to believe theyre responsible for
    90 of the problems problems that can be cured
    by system improvements
  • Top management needs to sow the seeds of Lean/
    JIT by being accountable, vulnerable, and driving
    fear from the work place.
  • Question In a traditional antagonistic
    management system, what happens when the line
    shuts down?
  • A someone gets yelled at.
  • In Lean/ JIT system, breakdowns are an
    opportunity to fix root causes

12
The hardest thing you can ask an adult to do is
change his attitude
  • If youve been on a line and gotten yelled at
    each time its crashed for 20 years, can you
    really be expected to stop the line now once we
    hang up a poster?
  • Really wanna make Lean/ JIT work? Throw out the
    old manager/supervisor/foreman team. And get a
    new team the supports the front line with the
    current system for a year. Then start.

13
The relationship link of Lean/ JIT
  • Requires cooperation between workers and
    management
  • Requires cooperation among departments
  • Requires cooperation among producer and supplier
  • Supplier relationships- how many to have? What we
    do incentivize our suppliers on?

14
Lean/ JIT practical summary/services
  • Lean/ JIT in its design is an approach to
    repetitive manufacturing or provision of services
    that emphasizes a continual effort to remove
    waste from the system.
  • In the service setting, an example would be an
    effort to reduce keystrokes customer service
    agents make to enter an order to reduce the waste
    of time (a component of service inventory)

15
Lean/ JIT practical summary/services
  • Lean/ JIT systems achieve important benefits
    through the use of small lot sizes, high quality,
    and a team approach
  • Service e.g.Countrywide offices. Each person has
    a traditional role, yet each is cross trained to
    support the other. Each person can answer
    customer questions, providing high quality
    service instead of Ill have blah blah blah
    call you back GMAC) (waste!)

16
Lean/ JIT practical summary/services
  • The main goal of Lean/ JIT is smooth production
    (I.e. level use of production resources and small
    lot sizes)
  • Service e.g.Countrywide offices. An application
    flows through the approval process so there is
    continuous (Lean/ JIT) rather than batch (MRP)
    processing. Result no setup times limited WIP
    allows focus on each customer contract
  • In GMACs batch environment, inventory is built
    up at the credit report desk, then waits to be
    worked on until the underwriter is ready.

17
Benefits of Small Lot Sizes Apply to Countrywide
18
Lean/ JIT practical summary/services
  • An important feature of Lean/ JIT Systems is they
    rely on pull systems to move work through the
    line.
  • Service At Countrywide, the underwriter is
    continuously intervening on behalf of the
    customer with the processor to see how the
    document is coming along. She is cross-trained to
    help if there is a bottleneck at the processor
    task. She is motivated to pull work to her task.
  • Push (GMAC batch) system contrast additional
    data entry to track process for customer loans
    lost in the cracks longer wait times

19
Building Blocks of Lean/ JIT service
  • Product design find the most important benefits
    for customers (At countrywide, accuracy and speed
    account for 80 of product value). Standardize
    forms.
  • Process design (based on the benefits required).
    Who does what tasks? How far down to the front
    lines can we cascade tasks
  • Organization elements (hallway conversations,
    mythology, MBWA)
  • Planning and Control (back end customer
    satisfaction research, productivity measures

20
Lean/ JIT Goals summarized
  • Eliminate disruptions
  • Make system flexible
  • Reduce setup and lead times
  • Eliminate waste
  • Minimize WIP
  • Simplify the process

21
Forms of waste services
Waste from overproduction duplication of data
entry (e.g. each person entering customer and
name on their form/station Waste of waiting time
result of batch processing Transportation waste
In service sector, communications costs waste
to customer resulting from over-specialization Inv
entory waste batch processing lead times result
in loss of customer goodwill and repeat orders
22
Forms of waste services
Processing waste over-processing getting
unnecessary info or reports because weve
always done it that way Waste of motion
keystrokes, paper movement resulting from
over-specialization Waste from product defects
re-work costs resulting from lack of
communication between over-specialized workers
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com